COFFEE BREAK 8B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD SATuRDAY, MARCH 20, 2021 Roommate with benefits is attracted to man’s friend DEAR ABBY: I have this dilemma. I’m a woman in my 40s with a good job, and I’m told I am a good catch. About six months ago, I moved in with a man I will call Peter. It started as a roommate situation, but then became friends with bene- fits. We have both agreed we are not a couple. The problem is Peter has a friend, “Reggie.” I like Reggie, and he likes me. We have hung out as a group several times. To the best of my knowledge, Reggie has no idea Peter and I are FWBs. Reggie recently asked me out to dinner as a date. I can see myself having a real relation- ship with him, but don’t know how Peter will react. Should I accept the invitation? I mean, it’s just one date. Also, should I mention it to Peter? DEAR — F.W.B. IN THE ABBY SOUTH DEAR F.W.B.: You and Peter have agreed that you are NOT a couple. Accept Reggie’s offer and be upfront with Peter about it. The only thing that might change would be that Peter will have to find another friend with bene- fits because the sexual aspect of your relationship with him may be over. DEAR ABBY: I have a If your intention is that your children grow up together, this is something that should have hap- pened years ago. As it stands, the 10-year age difference will mean your son will be grown and gone while your younger child is still at home. A doctor with a specialty in genetics could be helpful as you gather information. It is important that you understand what precau- tions might be wise to take before making this decision. DEAR ABBY: I care a lot about what friends, family — even the general public — do with their money. Specifically, I promote the benefits of owning a home, but I suspect my efforts to edu- cate them may need a more loving 22-year-old daughter from my first marriage and a 9-year-old son with my husband of 12 years. My husband is 57, and I just turned 41. I would like to have another baby, mainly because I want my 9-year-old son to have someone to grow up with. We have no other family. It’s just him and girl cousins, ages 9 and 5. Can you please advise me if my husband and I are OK or too old to have one more child? — CONSIDERING IT IN THE WEST DEAR CONSIDERING: I’m glad you wrote. This is something that should be discussed further with your husband to make sure you are on the same page, and also with your OB-GYN. approach. I just don’t want people I care about to throw their money away to their landlords. Do I need to be more loving and supportive vs. educating? — COMMUNITY HELPER DEAR HELPER: People usu- ally have good reasons for renting instead of buying. If you keep repeating your advice and it’s falling on deaf ears, it’s fair to conclude your message isn’t being appreciated. A saying widely attributed to Albert Einstein is, “Insanity is continuing to repeat an action over and over again but expecting different results.” You can volunteer to serve as an adviser, but only if these individ- uals want to make a change and ask for your help. News of the Weird 15th century bowl found at yard sale sells for $722,000 HARTFORD, Conn. — An exceptionally rare 15th century porcelain bowl made in China that somehow turned up at a Con- necticut yard sale and sold for just $35 was auctioned off Wednesday for nearly $722,000. The small white bowl adorned with cobalt blue paintings of flowers and other designs — one of only seven such bowls known to exist in the world — was among a variety of Chinese works of art sold by Sotheby’s as part of its Asia Week events. The names of the seller and buyer were not disclosed. Sotheby’s had estimated the value of the artifact at $300,000 to $500,000. The auction Wednesday, March 17, included 15 bids, starting at $200,000 from someone online and ending at $580,000 from another person bid- ding by phone. The official pur- chase price, which included var- ious fees, was $721,800. An antiques enthusiast came across the Ming Dynasty-era piece and thought it could be something special when browsing a yard sale in the New Haven area last year, according to Sotheby’s. The buyer later emailed information and photos to Sotheby’s asking for an evaluation. “Today’s result for this excep- tionally rare floral bowl, dating to the 15th century, epitomizes the incredible, once in a lifetime dis- covery stories that we dream about as specialists in the Chinese Art field,” Angela McAteer, head of Sotheby’s Chinese Works of Art Department, said in a statement. The bowl dates back to the early 1400s during the reign of the Yongle Emperor, the third ruler of the Ming Dynasty, and was made for the Yongle court. The Yongle court was known to have ush- ered in a new style to the porcelain kilns in the city of Jingdezhen, and the bowl is a quintessential Yongle Sotheby’s via AP This photo from March 2, 2021, shows a small porcelain bowl bought for $35 at a Con- necticut yard sale that turned out to be a rare, 15th century Chinese artifact worth be- tween $300,000 and $500,000. The bowl was auctioned off for nearly $722,000 at Sothe- by’s Auction of Important Chinese Art, in New York, on Wednesday, March 17. product, according to Sotheby’s. The bowl was made in the shape of a lotus bud or chicken heart. Inside, it is decorated with a medallion at the bottom and a quatrefoil motif surrounded by flowers. The outside includes four blossoms of lotus, peony, chrysan- themum and pomegranate flower. There are also intricate patterns at the top of both the outside and inside. McAteer said only six other such bowls are known to exist, and most of them are in museums. No others are in the United States. There are two at the National Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan, two at museums in London and one in the National Museum of Iran in Tehran, according to Sotheby’s. How the bowl ended up at a Connecticut yard sale remains a mystery. McAteer said it’s possible it was passed down through gener- ations of the same family who did not know how unique it was. No cigar: Interstellar object is cookie-shaped planet shard CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Our solar system’s first known weather | Go to AccuWeather.com William Hartmann and Michael Belton via AP This 2018 illustration shows a depiction of the Oumuamua interstellar object as a pan- cake-shaped disk. A study published in March 2021 says the mystery object is likely a remnant of a Pluto-like world and shaped like a cookie. interstellar visitor is neither a comet nor asteroid as first sus- pected and looks nothing like a cigar. A new study says the mys- tery object is likely a remnant of a Pluto-like world and shaped like a cookie. Arizona State University astronomers reported this week that the strange 148-foot object that appears to be made of frozen nitrogen, just like the surface of Pluto and Neptune’s largest moon Triton. The study’s authors, Alan Jackson and Steven Desch, think an impact knocked a chunk off an icy nitrogen-covered planet 500 million years ago and sent the piece tumbling out of its own star system, toward ours. The reddish remnant is believed to be a sliver of its original self, its outer layers evaporated by cosmic radiation and, more recently, the sun. It’s named Oumuamua, Hawaiian for scout, in honor of the observatory in Hawaii that discovered it in 2017. Visible only as a pinpoint of light millions of miles away at its closest approach, it was determined to have originated beyond our solar system because AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 39/47 Kennewick 37/47 St. Helens 38/50 40/49 40/53 39/51 37/49 Condon SUN MON TUE WED Mostly cloudy An afternoon shower A couple of showers Clouds and sun; chilly Cloudy 49 29 51 27 56 33 Eugene 0 4 6 37/51 43 31 48 27 53 32 0 4 5 La Grande 33 46 33 Comfort Index™ Enterprise 4 0 1 27 43 31 Comfort Index™ 0 50 33 0 4 6 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Thursday Low Thursday High: 91° Low: -2° Wettest: 3.21” 64° 37° 62° 38° 62° 28° PRECIPITATION (inches) Thursday Trace Month to date 0.13 Normal month to date 0.47 Year to date 1.08 Normal year to date 1.85 0.00 0.06 0.84 5.09 3.61 0.00 0.10 1.30 12.03 6.80 AGRICULTURAL INFO. HAY INFORMATION SUNDAY Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration 40% W at 6 to 12 mph 2.1 0.07 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Friday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir 12% of capacity 56% of capacity 54% of capacity 68% of capacity 47% of capacity 101% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Thursday) Grande Ronde at Troy 5590 cfs Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder 117 cfs Burnt River near Unity 35 cfs Umatilla River near Gibbon 748 cfs Minam River at Minam 363 cfs Powder River near Richland 281 cfs Titusville, Fla. Gould, Colo. Beaufort, S.C. OREGON High: 74° Low: 20° Wettest: 0.46” Ontario Odell Lake Florence WEATHER HISTORY On March 20, 1948, Juneau, Alaska, re- ceived almost 33 inches of snow. This was the heaviest snow ever to fall in Alaska’s capital. SUN & MOON SAT. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset SUN. 6:55 a.m. 6:53 a.m. 7:05 p.m. 7:06 p.m. 10:33 a.m. 11:16 a.m. 1:41 a.m. 2:41 a.m. MOON PHASES First Mar 21 Full Mar 28 Last Apr 4 Beaver Marsh Powers 37/50 New Apr 11 38/53 Silver Lake Jordan Valley 26/44 Paisley 23/51 24/51 Frenchglen 26/47 Medford 22/50 City Astoria Bend Boise Brookings Burns Coos Bay Corvallis Council Elgin Eugene Hermiston Hood River Imnaha John Day Joseph Kennewick Klamath Falls Lakeview Hi/Lo/W 47/41/r 50/35/pc 53/36/s 50/41/pc 49/30/pc 50/41/c 50/41/r 46/25/pc 45/34/c 51/42/c 55/41/pc 49/40/r 49/35/pc 46/33/pc 41/30/pc 56/42/pc 50/29/s 48/30/s Hi/Lo/W 49/38/sh 47/27/sn 51/32/pc 51/40/pc 46/26/sn 50/37/pc 52/36/sh 43/21/pc 43/28/sh 53/38/sh 57/33/pc 51/35/pc 45/28/sh 43/31/sh 39/26/sn 60/30/pc 44/24/sn 44/25/sn 29/56 27/53 Lakeview 20/48 McDermitt 23/47 RECREATION FORECAST SUNDAY REGIONAL CITIES MON. Grand View Arock 25/49 Klamath Falls Shown is Sunday’s weather. Temperatures are Saturday night’s lows and Sunday’s highs. SUN. Diamond 27/45 Fields 39/57 37/50 Boise 32/53 37/59 Brookings 28/52 22/48 Chiloquin Grants Pass Juntura 25/49 23/45 20/44 Roseburg Ontario 31/58 Burns Brothers 34/48 Coos Bay Huntington 23/43 28/50 Oakridge 24/46 32/55 Seneca Bend Elkton Council 28/50 30/46 29/48 Florence THURSDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin 25/43 John Day 27/50 Sisters 38/50 Comfort Index takes into account how the weather will feel based on a combination of factors. A rating of 10 feels very comfortable while a rating of 0 feels very uncomfortable. 28/48 Baker City Redmond 39/49 Halfway Granite 37/50 Newport 38/51 45 25 30/51 32/42 36/49 38/47 40 28 2 Corvallis Enterprise 27/43 33/46 Monument 36/49 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 1 Elgin 33/45 La Grande 32/45 Maupin Comfort Index™ 37/52 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 37/53 Hood River 36/51 TIllamook 28 50 32 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 36/56 Vancouver 37/48 39/48 Baker City but virtual this year. Not all scientists buy the new explanation. Harvard Universi- ty’s Avi Loeb disputes the find- ings and stands by his premise the object appears to be more artificial than natural — in other words, something from an alien civilization, perhaps a light sail. His newly published book “Extra- terrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth,” addresses the subject. When Oumuamua was at its closest approach to Earth, it appeared to have a width six times larger than its thickness. Those are the rough proportions of one wafer of an Oreo cookie, Desch noted. By the time the object starts leaving our solar system around 2040, the width-to-thickness ratio will have dropped to 10-to-1, according to Desch. “So maybe Oumuamua was consistent with a cookie when we saw it, but will soon be literally as flat as a pancake,” Desch said in an email. That’s the way the cosmic cookie — this one anyway — crumbles. — Associated Press its speed and path suggested it wasn’t orbiting the sun or any- thing else. The only other object con- firmed to have strayed from another star system into our own is the comet 21/Borisov, discov- ered in 2019. But what is Oumuamua? It didn’t fit into known categories — it looked like an asteroid but sped along like a comet. Unlike a comet, though, it didn’t have a visible tail. Speculation flipped back and forth between comet and asteroid — and it was even suggested it could be an alien artifact. Using its shininess, size and shape — and that it was propelled by escaping substances that didn’t produce a visible tail — Jackson and Desch devised computer models that helped them deter- mine Oumuamua was most likely a chunk of nitrogen ice being gradually eroded, the way a bar of soap thins with use. Their two papers were pub- lished Tuesday, March 16, by the American Geophysical Union and also presented at the Lunar and Planetary Sciences Confer- ence, typically held in Houston City Lewiston Longview Meacham Medford Newport Olympia Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Powers Redmond Roseburg Salem Spokane The Dalles Ukiah Walla Walla SUN. MON. Hi/Lo/W 53/39/c 47/37/r 45/32/sh 57/40/pc 47/40/r 46/34/r 58/37/pc 57/41/pc 51/40/c 51/42/r 50/41/c 50/33/pc 53/42/c 49/40/r 46/35/c 53/40/c 44/32/c 52/40/c Hi/Lo/W 52/34/sh 51/33/sh 42/30/sh 57/38/pc 48/37/sh 52/31/sh 57/32/pc 60/30/pc 51/34/sh 53/39/sh 52/41/pc 49/28/sn 55/38/pc 52/37/sh 48/28/pc 55/36/pc 41/26/sn 52/35/sh Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice ANTHONY LAKES PHILLIPS LAKE A little p.m. snow Clouds and sun 25 17 46 30 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. A little p.m. snow Mostly cloudy 33 27 49 30 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Partly sunny Afternoon fl urries 30 18 41 30 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Sun and clouds Mostly cloudy 41 30 51 38 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Partly sunny A p.m. shower 50 32 46 33