A8 COFFEE BREAK East Oregonian Saturday, November 6, 2021 DEAR ABBY Single woman struggles to connect in new community Dear Abby: I have been living in a 55-plus community in Florida for several years. I’m a single woman, and I moved here for the weather and to meet new friends. In this community, there are “cliques.” One does everything together and never includes anyone else. The other is a combination of full-time residents and seasonal residents. I’m “friendly” with almost everyone in each group. I work with them on commit- tees, in clubs, etc. However, when it comes to socializing in the evenings or at the beach or parties, I’m seldom included by either group. One person told me it was because I’m single; another told me they didn’t want me to feel out of place because it was couples. Is this friendship, or should I look for friends elsewhere? — Ready, Willing And Able Dear Ready: No, this is not “friendship.” You wrote that one of these cliques isn’t open to new members. The women in the second group may not welcome you because they them a special iPad to FaceTime with, but it feel threatened by your single status, which hasn’t been used, nor do they ever call us. is why you are welcomed to “work” They actually didn’t speak to us with them but not socialize. It’s sad for nine months over a perceived really, and more of a refl ection on slight. them than on you. By all means Now they want us to come visit look for friends elsewhere, possibly them. We desperately want to see in groups in which there are other our grandchildren. They know singles. If you do, I’m sure you will us only as the “package people” have better luck. because we send gifts. Please help us fi gure out what to do. Our son Dear Abby: My son, daughter- JEANNE in-law and 1-year-old granddaugh- hasn’t spoken to his dad in seven PHILLIPS ter moved across the country two months because of this perceived ADVICE years ago and have not once come wrong. We feel it will be really to see us. They promised they uncomfortable for all of us. — To would come as often as they could Go Or Not To Go Dear To Go: The longer this estrangement or, I should say, as often as she went to see her parents, which is every four months or lasts, the more embedded it will become. You so. need to go, see your grandchildren and mend They now have a brand-new baby we fences, if possible. Regardless of how the visit haven’t seen due to COVID-19. We bought turns out, at the least you will have seen your grandchildren. If you make the eff ort, it may start your family on the path of healing. Dear Abby: When dining out in restau- rants I often see people stack their dirty dishes at the table before or as the server removes them. This has never seemed right to me. Do I need to change my view of table manners? — Binnie In Iowa Dear Binnie: Try to be a bit less judgmen- tal. Although what you describe is considered a breach of etiquette, there are people who are averse to having dirty dishes in front of them once they have fi nished eating. In a formal dining establishment, the server should be asked to remove the empty plates. Dear Readers: Daylight saving time ends at 2 a.m. Sunday. Don’t forget to turn your clocks back one hour at bedtime tonight. And while you’re at it, put fresh batteries in your fi re alarms and smoke detectors. — Love, Abby DAYS GONE BY 100 years ago Nov. 6, 1921 Playing straight football and showing the good eff ects of many weeks hard coaching and training in the smooth way in which plays were run off , Pendleton high school’s team smacked the game Athena aggre- gation to tune of 47 to 7 in a contest on Round-Up fi eld. As far as football was concerned the game was a one-sided aff air and so rather uninteresting, but the Athena lads kept the respect of the fans by their will- ingness to meet the Buckaroos all of the time with hard fi ghting. Coach Hanley took no chances on spilling any of the good stuff which is being worked up for the hard game here next Friday when Baker high will invade the local camp in an eff ort to grab off the cham- pionship of Eastern Oregon. The Baker coach was here on the sidelines, and all the information he secured about the extras in the Buckaroo collection of plays could be placed in his eye without impairing his sight. 50 years ago Nov. 6, 1971 Plant scientists are keeping a close watch on a new grain disease. It’s called “take all” and has shown up in Western Oregon and some irrigated areas, says Dr. Warren Kronstad of Oregon State University. He told Umatilla County wheat growers about it during their annual meeting Tuesday in Pendleton. “It scares us because our grains have no resistance to it at all,” he said, although one wheat in test plots seems to be tolerant of the disease. Disease research is just one of the many avenues followed by plant scientists in their efforts to develop new and better varieties of wheat and barley, Kronstad said. Stripe rust is one of the grain enemies about which scientists want to learn more. The disease threatened enormous losses when it showed up in force here in 1960. But wheat breeders were ready and replaced susceptible Moro with Omar. 25 years ago Nov. 6, 1996 The City Hall siren that has heralded noon hour in Pendleton for decades will continue wailing its lunch- bell call. City council members gave the go ahead to Jim Sewell, the new owner of the old city hall building, to continue the traditional, building-shaking blast. It was installed in the 1950s as a sounding device to alert reserve and volunteer fi refi ghters that extra manpower was needed at a fi re scene. Its original purpose long gone, it has since become a fi xture in town, with resi- dents even in outlying areas able to hear its piercing shriek every day except Sunday. Sewell said he had received hundreds of phone calls and letters asking that he continue the old air raid siren, including a packet of letters written to him by Hawthorne Elemen- tary School fourth grade students. “One kid said it was annoying, the rest wanted it,” Sewell said. THIS DAY IN HISTORY On Nov. 6, 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham Lincoln of the Republican Party was elected President of the United States as he defeated John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas. In 1632, King Gustavus Adol- phus of Sweden was killed in battle. In 1893, composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky died in St. Petersburg, Russia, at age 53. In 1906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected gover- nor of New York, defeating news- paper publisher William Randolph Hearst. In 1928, in a fi rst, the results of Republican Herbert Hoover’s presi- dential election victory over Demo- crat Alfred E. Smith were fl ashed onto an electric wraparound sign on the New York Times building. In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower won reelection, defeating Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson. In 1977, 39 people were killed when the Kelly Barnes Dam in Georgia burst, sending a wall of water through Toccoa Falls College. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan won re-election by a land- slide over former Vice President Walter Mondale, the Democratic challenger. In 1990, about one-fi fth of the Universal Studios backlot in south- ern California was destroyed in an arson fi re. In 2012, President Barack Obama was elected to a second term of offi ce, defeating Republi- can challenger Mitt Romney. In 2014, the march toward same-sex marriage across the U.S. hit a roadblock when a federal appeals court upheld laws against the practice in four states: Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and Tennes- see. (A divided U.S. Supreme Court overturned the laws in June 2015.) In 2015, President Barack Obama rejected the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, declaring it would undercut U.S. eff orts to clinch a global climate change deal at the center of his environmental legacy. (President Donald Trump would reverse the Obama decision, but President Joe Biden canceled the permit for the pipeline on the day he took offi ce.) In 2017, former Democratic congressman Anthony Weiner reported to prison in Massachu- setts to begin a 21-month sentence for sexting with a 15-year-old girl. Today’s Birthdays: Actor June Squibb is 92. Country singer Stonewall Jackson is 89. Singer P.J. Proby is 83. Actor Sally Field is 75. Singer Rory Block is 72. Jazz musi- cian Arturo Sandoval is 72. TV host Catherine Crier is 67. News corre- spondent and former California fi rst lady Maria Shriver is 66. Actor Lori Singer is 64. Actor Lance Kerwin is 61. Former Education Secretary Arne Duncan is 57. Rock singer Corey Glover is 57. Actor Brad Grunberg is 57. Actor Peter DeLuise is 55. Actor Kelly Ruth- erford is 53. Actor Ethan Hawke is 51. Chef/TV judge Marcus Samuelsson is 51. Actor Thandiwe Newton (formerly Thandie) is 49. Model-actor Rebecca Romijn is 49. Actor Zoe McLellan is 47. Actor Nicole Dubuc is 43. Actor Taryn Manning is 43. Retired NBA star Lamar Odom is 42. Actor Patina Miller is 37. Actor Katie Leclerc is 35. Singer-songwriter Ben Rector is 35. Singer-songwriter Robert Ellis is 33. Actor Emma Stone is 33. Actor Mercedes Kastner is 32. CHURCH DIRECTORY ONLI NE and I N-PERSON SERVI CES S U N D A Y S | 8 : 3 0 A M & 10:00 A M 541.276.1894 | 712 SW 27TH www.pendletoncog.com love God, love people, and make disciples who make disciples PENDLETON LIGHTHOUSE CHURCH Sunday Service: 9am & 6pm Tuesday Kingdom Seekers: 7pm Wednesday Bible Study: 7pm We offer: Sunday School • Sign Language Interpreters • Nursery • Transportation • & more! Pastor Dan Satterwhite 541.377.4252 417 NW 21st St. • Pendleton, OR 97801 www.facebook.com/ PendletonLighthouseChurch Solid Rock Community Church 140 SW 2nd St Hermiston, OR 97838 Community Presbyterian Church 14 Martin Drive, Umatilla, OR 922-3250 Worship: 10 AM Sunday School at 11:30 First Christian Church (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST) 215 N. Main • Pendleton In Person worship Sundays at 11:00am Office Phone: 541-276-5358 Hours: M-F 9:00am-1:00pm OPEN HEARTS – OPEN DOOR www.graceandmercylutheran.org Sunday Worship 8:45 a.m. Sunday School 10:00 a.m. (Nursery Provided) Fellowship, Refreshments & Sunday School Check Out our Facebook Page or Website for More Information 541-289-4535 Pastor Weston Walker Grace and Mercy Lutheran Church, ELCA (First United Methodist Church) 191 E. Gladys Ave. / P.O. Box 1108 Hermiston, Oregon 97838 The Salvation Army Center for Worship & Service Sunday Worship Service 9:30 - Sunday School 10:30 - Worship Service Wednesday Bible Study 5:30 Family Fellowship Meal • 6:00 Bible Study COME AS YOU ARE 150 SE Emigrant (541) 276-3369 Redeemer Episcopal Church 541-567-6937 241 SE Second St. Pendleton (541)276-3809 www.pendletonepiscopal.org PendletonPresbyterian.com Worship Service: 11:00AM Sunday School: 9:45 Pastor Wilbur Clark Sunday Holy Communion: 9am Wednesday Holy Communion: Noon M-F Morning Prayer 7am on Zoom Worship Services On Facebook 10:00am Sundays All Are Welcome 201 SW Dorion Ave. Facebook.com/PendletonPresbyterian St. Johns Episcopal Church N.E. Gladys Join Ave & Us 7th, Hermiston 541-567-6672 401 Northgate, Pendleton 401 Northgate, Pendleton Celebration of Worship Celebration JOIN OUR INCLUSIVE CONGREGATION ON OUR JOURNEY WITH JESUS of Worship Services 9:00am Sundays In-person or streaming on Facebook or Zoom Sundays 10:00 am Youth: 0-6th grade Midweek Service Midweek Service FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH Wednesdays 6:00 pm Overcomer’s Outreach Youth: 0-6th grade ’ High Jr./Sr. in Mission for Christ LCMC Sunday Worship.........9:00 AM Bible Study......10:15 AM Pastor Sharon Miller 541-278-8082 www.livingwordcc.com Red Lion Hotel ( Oregon Trail Room ) COME WORSHIP WITH US AT THE COUNTRY CHURCH Pastor Sharon Miller Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church 565 W. HERMISTON AVE. Iglesia Católica Nuestra www.livingwordcc.com Señora de los Ángeles 565 W. HERMISTON AVE. Sundays at 11:00am 32742 Diagonal Rd. Hermiston, OR To advertise in the Church Directory, please contact Audra Workman 541-564-4538 or email aworkman@eastoregonian.com