A6 The BulleTin • Friday, april 2, 2021 Weather DEAR ABBY Write to Dear Abby online at dearabby.com or by mail at P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 Dear Abby: At the age of 30, I recently had to move back with my parents. I am not the tidiest person in the world, but I thrive on the say- ing, “Dust, not dirt.” I recently went on vaca- tion. I knew my room was a little messier than I’d like, but I also knew I’d return from vacation ready to tackle the pile of laundry and sweep and mop the floor. Lo and behold, when I walked into my room, it was clean and or- ganized! Abby, I felt my pri- vacy had been invaded. I was embarrassed and ashamed, but also hurt be- cause my parents had tres- passed beyond my closed door. I feel betrayed and like my personal privacy was un- dermined. What should I do? — Invaded Space Dear Invaded: I’m glad you asked. I think you should get over it, and fast. I assume you are staying rent-free in your parents’ home. You are no longer a teen- ager, and nobody trespassed. While you are under their roof, make an extra effort to keep the room you occupy free from dust and a pile of dirty laundry. If you act like a gracious guest instead of a spoiled child, there will be no reason to feel embarrassed or ashamed. Dear Abby: I’m married and the mother of two kids, ages 5 and 7. My husband is a very involved father and partner in our marriage. My complaint is that he’s too trusting of other people and doesn’t keep an eye on the kids in public places. An example: He’ll take them to the grocery store and let them hang out in the toy department while he’s getting groceries. They will be 100 yards away from each other. I have told him several times that I’m not comfortable with this, yet he continues to do it. I’m not sure what to do about it anymore. Have you any suggestions? — Nervous in Nebraska Dear Nervous: Yes. Be- cause your husband can’t be trusted to watch the children when they accompany him shopping, talk to the kids and impress upon them the im- portance of staying close to their father. However, if this doesn’t work, then YOU will have to take over the errands until the children are older. Dear Abby: I’m 60 and was a stay-at-home mom for 20 years. I have an associate de- gree in the field that I just got a job in. My problem is, at this age, I’m a little slower at learning new things. My su- pervisor was willing to help me for the first week, but now she seems to have lost patience with me. I have been here barely two weeks, and she made a comment that made me feel terrible. She was trying to teach me a filing system, and I was having a hard time un- derstanding it. She said in front of the entire office that “around here we have to use our brains.” Should I talk to her or just push through? — A Little Slower Dear Slower: Let it slide this time. However, if her lack of tact continues, talk to her about how her comment made you feel. And in the meantime, learn that filing system. YOUR HOROSCOPE By Madalyn Aslan Stars show the kind of day you’ll have DYNAMIC | POSITIVE | AVERAGE | SO-SO | DIFFICULT HAPPY BIRTHDAY FOR FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 2021: Funny, sharp and vigorous, pursue your dreams no matter how far-reaching they seem. This year, you initiate changes you never thought possible. Keep your day job but use your spare time to fulfill physical and creative challenges. Be mindful of finances since your extracurricular activities may run over budget. If single, you will attract someone who thinks like you. If attached, don’t hide any- thing from your partner. GEMINI humors you. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Take advantage of a few hours when you have no obligations. Search online for an out-of-print or rare book you have wanted to purchase. It requires patience, but you might find what you want. Tonight: Fun with children and grandchildren. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your emotions may be on overdrive. Feeling joyful will infect every- one around you. Don’t give in to irrational fears. Think about happy things instead. Reserve time to get physical with a walk, run or swim. Tonight: A serious talk with someone close. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may have second thoughts about a commitment you made too hastily. Take time to negotiate the terms and conditions. Talk it over with someone you trust. Strengthen a connection with someone you recently met. Tonight: Live dangerously with a rich dessert. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Give your pet special attention. Find a home for a stray at an animal shelter. Teamwork saves you from a monotonous job. Enter a competition or take on a challenge you may have passed on previously. Tonight: Attend an online meeting. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Lay the groundwork for fulfilling an artistic vision. A mentor can steer you in the right direction. Be open to unusual ideas. Follow your instincts, and you can never go wrong. Go out with friends. Tonight: Laugh it up. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Explore real estate for fun. Visit interesting neighborhoods or places you might want to live. Make your workspace at home practical and comfort- able. If you need to replace equipment, take time to research the best deal. Tonight: Unwind with a mystery. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Brush up on time-management skills. You may have to rely on them if overloaded with too many projects. Set limits for yourself and stay true to them. Too much information can tie you in knots. Tonight: Do what you love. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Make healthy lifestyle choices a family affair. Join a gym or take power walks together. Purchase weights so you can work out at home. Pre- pare nutritious and balanced meals. The fun is eating the delicious results. Tonight: Plan weekend activities. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Use your charisma to get your foot in the door. Take the lead even though you don’t always like being in charge. There is no time like the pres- ent. Friends and family will support you if you fall. Tonight: Story time. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Carve out a space for alone time. Just say “no” to parties and social events. Friends will understand. Use your imagination. A drawing pad and notebook is all you need to delve into new ways to express yourself. Tonight: Karaoke. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Get together with friends who make you laugh. Keep the conversation light. A serious talk is for another time. Get tickets to a concert or sporting event. Order online. It might take time, but it is worth the wait. Tonight: Play trivia. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Continued from A1 The lowest temperature re- corded last month was 17 de- grees on March 30. The record low temperature for the month in Bend was minus 13 degrees on March 2, 1917, according to the data. March precipitation in Bend totaled 0.16 of an inch, which was 0.57 of an inch below nor- mal. Measurable precipita- tion of at least 0.01 of an inch was recorded on four days. The heaviest precipitation last month was 0.06 of an inch on March 6. So far this year, precipita- tion in Bend has reached 2.33 inches, which is 1.02 inches be- low normal. March snowfall in Bend to- taled 0.6 of an inch. The heavi- est snowfall was 0.2 of an inch on March 9. The totals were much lower than the 4.5 inches of snow recorded in March National Weather Service The summary of the weather in Bend during March 2021. 2019. The weather outlook for April calls for below normal temperatures and near normal precipitation. The 60 degree weather this week is expected to cool down by Monday, when high tem- peratures drop to 50 degrees, said Rob Brooks, a weather service meteorologist in Pend- leton. “We have another system coming in Sunday,” Brooks said. “It brings in a little cold air behind it.” Normal high temperatures for April in Bend rise from Internships Continued from A1 Russell is one of 32 high school and college students in Deschutes and Jefferson coun- ties who have started an in- ternship this school year with the help of Bend organization Youth CareerConnect.Youth CareerConnect — operated by the nonprofit Economic Devel- opment for Central Oregon — has linked local students with internships since 2017. And despite the COVID-19 pan- demic forcing the organization to pause operations last spring, Youth CareerConnect staffers began helping students again this fall. Now, nearly 45 local busi- nesses, from medical nonprof- its to airplane manufacturers to real estate companies, are of- fering internships to students. “Businesses are recovering. We’ve got a lot of opportunities coming in,” said Larry Hole- man, Youth CareerConnect’s Bend internship coordinator. “Students are getting inter- views and placed.” Although some interns are working inside offices, stores and manufacturing centers, other students are still working remotely, Holeman said. Jackson Hogan/The Bulletin Wahoo Films production manager Carlene Orsillo teaches 18-year-old intern Roman Russell of Bend how to operate the teleprompter before a shooting at the Wahoo Films studio in downtown Bend on Wednesday. Many of these positions just opened back up this win- ter. Last fall, while waiting for more jobs to become available, Youth CareerConnect staff focused on helping students build resumes and hone inter- view skills — two important factors to getting a job, Hole- man said. “A resume gets you in the door, and an interview closes the deal,” he said. “These are skills they’ll take now, through the end of their career.” Holeman said there are many benefits for students who get an internship through Youth CareerConnect. It’s not only immediate perks, like earning college credit and having something unique to put on a college application — these internships also help teens figure out what they’re interested in, and how to thrive in an adult work setting. “Think about it as a real world classroom,” Holeman said. Gun storage Continued from A1 On March 25, the Oregon Senate voted 16-7 to approve a bill making state buildings — including the Capitol — off-limits to firearms carried by concealed-handgun licens- ees. Senate Bill 554, which went to the House, leaves it up to local governments to decide that question for their own buildings. Oregon is among the states with no laws regulating gun storage, according to the pro-regulation Giffords Law Center. Laws in California and Washington apply to some as- pects of storage. When the House Health Care Committee heard the gun storage bill March 11, al- most 400 pieces of testimony were submitted for and against House Bill 2510. Some people submitted more than one. “We cannot gun-proof chil- dren,” Dr. Benjamin Hoffman, pediatrician at Doernbecher Children’s Hospital at Oregon Health & Science University, testified. “We must child-proof guns.” Between 1999 and 2019, he said, Oregon averaged 3.5 Oregon Capital Insider A cable gun lock. Oregon has no laws regulating gun storage. deaths by firearms per 100,000 people, compared with the national average of 2.3 per 100,000. For youths under 19 during the period, he said Oregon averaged 6.3 deaths per 100,000, compared with the national average of 5 per 100,000. “Gun violence is one of the leading causes of death for peo- ple my age,” Hope Williams, a volunteer with Students De- mand Action in Oregon, said in a statement after the vote. “We want to feel safe at home and in our communities and that starts with securely storing We hear you. We’re dedicated to helping you! Contact your local DISH Authorized Retailer today! Juniper Satellite 410 3474 410 3474 Share ideas with people you respect but whose views are different (541) 410-3474 410 3474 410 3474 from yours. Incorporate those concepts into your work and think outside the box. Reward yourself for your efforts. Treat yourself to a frivolous yet inex- pensive item. Tonight: Practice public speaking. 635 SW Highland Ave., Redmond, OR junipersatellite.com firearms to prevent gun vio- lence.” Students Demand Action, together with Moms Demand Action, constitute Everytown for Gun Safety. “Even in a pandemic, our communities are continuing to endure gun violence everyday,” said Elizabeth Klein, a gun violence survivor and volun- teer for the Oregon chapter of Moms Demand Action. “And, unintentional shootings and gun suicides have continued to rise over the past year. Se- cure storage is an effective and easy way to help prevent these 54 degrees at the start of the month to 60 degrees at the end. Normal low temperatures rise from 29 degrees to 32 de- grees throughout the month. The normal April precipita- tion in Bend is 0.78 of an inch. e Reporter: 541-617-7820, kspurr@bendbulletin.com Youth CareerConnect is ex- pecting even more internship opportunities to be available this summer for students, as the weather gets nicer and COVID-19 cases hopefully continue to fall, said Debbie Taylor, the group’s Jefferson County internship coordinator. “I’ve had so many (jobs) come into the system in the last two weeks, oh my goodness,” she said. “These businesses are ready to get behind these kids and get them started in the in- dustry.” The three Youth CareerCon- nect coordinators — one for Bend, one for Redmond and one for Jefferson County — are working to make sure students have a variety of internship op- portunities, Taylor said. She’s used her connections built from 16 years living in Madras to hunt down great jobs for teens, she said — from the Ma- dras Animal Hospital to a seed seller in Metolius. “There’s quite a few busi- ness owners I know person- ally,” Taylor said. “And if I don’t know them, I know somebody to make a warm introduction, or I’m not shy to walk into the door and introduce myself.” e Reporter: 541-617-7854, jhogan@bendbulletin.com tragedies. But Oregon’s gun-rights ad- vocates staunchly opposed the bill. “This bill will subject hundreds of thousands of law-abiding citizens with po- tential criminal and civil liabil- ity overnight for actions that are perfectly legal today,” Paul Donheffner, legislative com- mittee chairman for the Ore- gon Hunters Association, said in testimony to the committee. Kevin Starrett is director of the Oregon Firearms Fed- eration, which bills itself as a no-compromise group on gun rights. It even disparaged Re- publican lawmakers working on regulation of firearms sales at gun shows in 1999, a year after the group’s founding. The bill did not pass, but voters ap- proved a related initiative mea- sure in 2000 by a 62% majority. Starrett had harsher words for lawmakers during his com- mittee testimony. “Gun owners in Oregon have been remarkably well-be- haved,” he said. “But if you keep rewarding criminals and punishing the law-abiding, don’t expect them to stay that way.” e pwong@pamplinmedia.com 40 Days to Connect to Courage A Six Week Leadership Series Tuesdays, April 6 - May 18 7:00 - 8:15p Online via Zoom Inspired by Brene Brown’s Dare to Lead & Baron Baptiste’s 40 Days to Personal Revolution, join Brandy Berlin for gentle yoga, meditation, guided discussions & exercises to brave trust & rebound upwards into new realm of personal & professional possibility. Register at Namaspa.com/workshops