COFFEE BREAK B6 — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD SATuRDAY, SEpTEmBER 11, 2021 Teen navigates opposing currents of reality, religion they make apply to my friends, but I’m afraid to give them my opinion. I’m unsure whether I should say anything at all. Can you help me? — Keeping Quiet in California Dear Keeping Quiet: You are free to think the way you do, and to support your friends. However, you are not likely to change the way your parents feel on this subject. Your friends have come out to you, but not to your parents. If you out them to your parents, they may forbid you from seeing those friends. In two years, you will be 18, legally an adult and more able to express your thoughts with fewer nega- tive ramifications. If I were you, I’d wait. Dear Abby: I’m a 16-year-old girl, and I’ve been strug- gling a little bit. My family is super-Christian. They believe that members of the LGBTQ community are sinful because of who they are. I do not agree. I have a small group of friends. Two of them have come out to me as bi and gen- der-fluid. When my family talks about gay people, they say hor- rible things. I want to tell them what they are saying is wrong and that the mean comments Dear Abby: My husband was annoyed and upset by a cricket in the house. He had used insect spray, but it was still chirping, so he asked me to take care of it. I told him I didn’t know how to get rid of a cricket, since we didn’t know where it was exactly. He was banging around the utility room. I called his name and asked him where he had sprayed — no answer. I asked again. No response. I then used his full name, and he got upset that I did! He said it was disrespectful and that I was “treating him like a child.” I apologized if I had hurt his feelings, but he’s still upset with me because I don’t agree it was disrespectful. Am I wrong? Is posted on her Facebook page that she was having a sale because it was her birthday. I thought it was greedy and inappropriate, as I was always taught that it’s a breach of etiquette to announce that it’s your birthday, especially as an adult. Am I right? Or am I reading too much into this? — Bothered in the East Dear Bothered: You are reading too much into this. There is nothing wrong about people revealing that it’s their birthday. It doesn’t obligate anyone to fork over anything more than their good wishes. If you decide to shop the sale, all you have to do is say, “How nice! I hope you are enjoying your special day.” it disrespectful to use your hus- band’s full name when trying to get his attention? — Sad in Nevada Dear Sad: It’s not disre- spectful if you can’t get him to respond any other way. I don’t know what your husband’s rela- tionship was with his mother. Perhaps she used his full name when he ignored her as he did to you when he was “playing cricket.” The next time he tells you to take care of something you can’t handle, pick up the phone and hire a professional. That way you won’t have to inconvenience your husband. Dear Abby: The owner of a store I shop at every week, who I believe is in her 40s, recently NEWS OF THE WEIRD Research on beards, wads of gum wins 2021 Ig Nobel prizes SALT LAKE CITY — Beards aren’t just cool and trendy — they might also be an evolutionary develop- ment to help protect a man’s delicate facial bones from a punch to the face. That’s the conclusion of a trio of scientists from the University of Utah who are among the winners of this year’s Ig Nobel prizes, the Nobel Prize spoofs that honor — or maybe dis- honor, depending on your point of view — strange sci- entific discoveries. The winners of the 31st annual Ig Nobels being announced Thursday, Sept. 9, included researchers who figured out how to better control cockroaches on U.S. Navy submarines; animal scientists who looked at whether it’s safer to trans- port an airborne rhinoceros upside-down; and a team that figured out just how disgusting that discarded gum stuck to your shoe is. For the second year in a row, the ceremony was a roughly 90-minute prere- corded digital event because of the worldwide coro- navirus pandemic, said Marc Abrahams, editor of the Annals of Improbable Research magazine, the event’s primary sponsor. While disappointing in many ways because half the fun of a live ceremony is the rowdy audience participa- tion, the ceremony retained many in-person traditions. Those included real Nobel laureates announcing the Elise Amendola/The Associated Press, File The 2019 Ig Nobel award is displayed at the 29th annual Ig Nobel awards ceremony at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Sept. 12, 2019. The spoof prizes for weird and sometimes head-scratch- ing scientific achievement were presented online in 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic. times with the fleece still on, sometimes sheared. They then dropped weights on them. The sample with the fleece still attached absorbed more energy than the sheared samples. “If the same is true for human facial hair, then having a full beard may help protect vulnerable regions of the facial skel- eton from damaging strikes, such as the jaw,” they said. “Presumably, full beards also reduce injury, lac- eration, and contusion to the skin and muscle of the face.” prizes, and the world pre- miere of a mini opera called “A Bridge Between People,” about children who lit- erally build tiny suspen- sion bridges to join two angry adults. No faces were punched for the beard study pub- lished in the scientific journal Integrative Organ- ismal Biology. Instead, University of Utah scientists Ethan Beseris, Steven Naleway and David Carrier used a fiber epoxy composite to simulate human bone, and sheepskin to act as the human skin — some- weather | Go to AccuWeather.com It’s obvious that those wads of discarded chewing gum found on sidewalks around the world are pretty revolting. But just how revolting? Researchers from a Spanish university deter- mined the already-chewed gum that has been stuck to the sidewalk for three months is teeming with nasty bacteria. It sounds like a silly study, but as usual, there was some method to the madness. “Our findings have implications for a wide range of disciplines, Former soccer player dies after 39 years in a coma PARIS — Jean-Pierre Adams, the former France and Paris Saint-Germain defender who spent 39 years in a coma, has died. He was 73. In a poignant tribute on Monday, Sept. 6, PSG AROUND OREGON AND THE REGION Astoria Longview 51/64 Kennewick 57/71 St. Helens 57/73 56/75 58/80 59/75 55/77 Condon SUN MON TUE WED Mainly clear Partly sunny and pleasant Partly sunny Mostly sunny and pleasant Nice with clouds and sun 75 35 77 39 79 39 Eugene 10 10 10 53/79 69 38 74 49 72 40 10 10 10 La Grande 46 74 46 Comfort Index™ 10 Enterprise 10 41 71 45 Comfort Index™ 10 73 48 67 34 10 10 9 ALMANAC NATION (for the 48 contiguous states) High Thursday Low Thursday High: 118° Low: 23° Wettest: 4.25” 93° 46° 83° 49° 91° 47° Thursday Trace Month to date Trace Normal month to date 0.14 Year to date 3.11 Normal year to date 6.56 0.02 0.02 0.18 6.56 11.51 0.00 0.00 0.28 15.79 16.19 PRECIPITATION (inches) HAY INFORMATION SUNDAY 35% NW at 6 to 12 mph 8.8 0.15 RESERVOIR STORAGE (through midnight Friday) Phillips Reservoir Unity Reservoir Owyhee Reservoir McKay Reservoir Wallowa Lake Thief Valley Reservoir N.A. 16% of capacity 13% of capacity 37% of capacity 0% of capacity 0% of capacity STREAM FLOWS (through midnight Thursday) Grande Ronde at Troy Thief Valley Reservoir near North Powder Burnt River near Unity Umatilla River near Gibbon Minam River at Minam Powder River near Richland Death Valley, Calif. Walden, Colo. Chatham, Mass. OREGON High: 99° Low: 43° Wettest: 0.02” Rome Meacham Florence WEATHER HISTORY AGRICULTURAL INFO. Lowest relative humidity Afternoon wind Hours of sunshine Evapotranspiration Elkton 51/73 North winds brought an early taste of autumn to the East Coast on Sept. 11, 1917. Temperatures dropped to as low as 25 degrees at Culvers Lake, N.J. SUN & MOON SAT. Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset SUN. 6:26 a.m. 6:27 a.m. 7:11 p.m. 7:09 p.m. 12:01 p.m. 1:20 p.m. 9:46 p.m. 10:23 p.m. MOON PHASES 449 cfs 0 cfs 80 cfs 41 cfs 49 cfs 2 cfs First Sep 13 Full Sep 20 Last Sep 28 New Oct 6 54/81 Silver Lake Jordan Valley 46/81 Paisley 41/78 39/77 Frenchglen 46/83 54/82 Klamath Falls 41/79 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 64/50/pc 72/43/pc 84/52/s 68/53/s 80/37/s 68/48/pc 76/47/s 81/47/pc 72/43/pc 79/48/pc 79/51/pc 75/51/pc 76/46/pc 76/45/pc 72/44/pc 80/50/pc 79/38/s 78/37/s Hi/Lo/W 65/49/pc 71/44/s 77/49/pc 72/53/s 79/35/s 67/50/s 76/47/s 78/41/pc 70/38/pc 78/46/s 77/46/s 75/51/s 75/44/pc 72/44/pc 68/42/pc 77/48/s 77/40/s 79/39/s 48/84 Lakeview 38/78 McDermitt 43/84 RECREATION FORECAST SUNDAY REGIONAL CITIES MON. Grand View Arock 45/85 48/85 Shown is Sunday’s weather. Temperatures are Saturday night’s lows and Sunday’s highs. SUN. Diamond 45/79 Fields Medford Brookings Boise 54/84 53/84 51/68 46/85 41/78 Chiloquin Grants Pass Juntura 37/80 41/70 Beaver Marsh Ontario 49/84 Burns Brothers 39/76 Roseburg Huntington 40/74 48/75 Coos Bay 47/81 53/82 Seneca 47/72 Oakridge Council 39/77 46/76 45/73 Bend THURSDAY EXTREMES TEMPERATURES Baker City La Grande Elgin 38/69 John Day 43/75 Sisters Florence Powers 41/79 Baker City Redmond 49/61 52/62 Halfway Granite 54/76 Newport 50/68 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. 50/79 48/71 57/79 55/78 70 42 10 Corvallis Enterprise 41/71 46/74 Monument 52/76 Idanha Salem TONIGHT 10 Elgin 41/72 La Grande 51/72 Maupin Comfort Index™ 10 56/77 Pendleton The Dalles Portland Newberg Lewiston 54/78 Hood River 51/75 TIllamook 39 77 38 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Walla Walla 52/80 Vancouver 56/74 52/64 Baker City called him the club’s “glo- rious elder.” “His joie de vivre, his charisma and his experi- ence command respect. Paris Saint-Germain offers its condolences to his family and loved ones,” PSG said in a statement. Adams, cared for by his wife, Bernadette, has been lying in a coma at his home in the southern French city of Nimes since 1982. He was injured in a match and required knee surgery. During the oper- ation at Lyon Hospital, an anaesthetic error saw him fall into a coma. As a young boy, Adams left his home country of Senegal with a passion for soccer. He was spotted by Nimes in 1970 and went on to score 10 goals in 98 matches for the club before playing almost 150 games and scoring 17 goals for Nice. Adams moved on to PSG in 1977 and played there for two seasons. He then ended his playing career in 1981 after brief spells with Mul- house and Chalon. He won his first cap for France in 1972 and went on to play 22 times for Les Bleus. Even though Adams was relatively short for a central defender at 5 feet 10 inches, he formed an imposing partnership with Marius Tresor. The last of Adams’ inter- national appearances was away to Denmark in 1976. including forensics, con- tagious disease control, or bioremediation of wasted chewing gum residues,” Leila Satari, Alba Guillén, Àngela Vidal-Verdú, and Manuel Porcar from the University of Valencia wrote in their paper, which was published at Nature. com. A team of U.S. Navy researchers won for fig- uring out a cheaper and more effective way to con- trol cockroaches on subma- rines. The 1971 study that appeared in Journal of Eco- nomic Entomology found that traditional methods such as carboxide fumiga- tion and use of the pesticide malathion were not good enough. They found that using the pesticide dichlorvos was less expensive and more effective. The goal is to return next year’s ceremony to its tra- ditional home at Harvard University’s Sanders The- atre, Abrahams said, but much depends on whether the pandemic is under con- trol and what kind of travel restrictions are in place around the world. The Associated Press 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 78/54/pc 71/50/s 72/42/pc 82/51/s 61/45/pc 72/47/pc 84/56/s 81/48/pc 75/50/pc 75/55/pc 73/47/s 75/40/pc 81/51/s 79/49/s 73/49/pc 80/51/pc 70/36/pc 77/53/pc Hi/Lo/W 77/53/pc 73/46/pc 71/37/pc 82/51/s 60/46/s 73/44/pc 82/47/pc 78/46/s 73/47/s 74/52/pc 74/49/s 74/40/s 80/49/s 76/51/s 72/47/s 79/53/s 70/32/s 75/54/s 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 Partly sunny; cool Nice with some sun 50 36 72 39 MT. EMILY REC. BROWNLEE RES. Partly sunny Partly sunny 60 40 80 46 EAGLE CAP WILD. EMIGRANT ST. PARK Partly sunny Partly sunny 58 31 66 34 WALLOWA LAKE MCKAY RESERVOIR Partly sunny Partly sunny; nice 72 44 74 50 THIEF VALLEY RES. RED BRIDGE ST. PARK Partial sunshine Partly sunny; nice 77 38 74 46