Page 6B East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Thursday, February 2, 2017 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Teen twins are ready to take different paths in new school FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE encourage, his other three grandpar- Dear Abby: I am a 14-year-old identical twin. My sister and I are sick ents to contribute to the account by of the whole “twin” thing and want to matching their contributions every go to separate schools. We really want year up to my $1,000? Or would it be to be our own people. We have wanted better to just tell them my plans and this for a long time now. However, let them know they can also make I’m not sure we can because, where deposits to the account? I don’t know I live, you have to go to the school in the financial situations of the others, the town you live in. and I don’t want to offend anyone. Jeanne Do you have any suggestions Phillips Your thoughts? — About To Be A on things we can do to make new, Grandpa In Arizona Advice different friends, and how we can Dear Grandpa: I’m voting for look different from each other? We your second idea, for the reason you are moving this year, so next fall we will be gave. While the concept of an education fund in a new school. — The Twin Thing In New for your grandbaby is laudable, making it a Hampshire “challenge” might create financial stress for Dear Twin Thing: You and your sister the other grandparents and be perceived as are smart girls. What you want to do will be one-upmanship if they are unable to donate healthy for both of you, and I congratulate as much to the fund as you do. you for wanting to do it. It’s important that Dear Abby: An older friend and I have each of you develop as individuals, and the exchanged emails since last spring. Hers have move will give the perfect opportunity to been mostly political and disparaging toward start. minorities. I asked her to please not send this If you have been dressing alike, make stuff since we have opposite opinions on the a point of not doing it from now on. If you subject, and I don’t plan to change my mind. have been wearing your hair in the same I enjoy our in-person talks because they are style, change that too. When you enroll in the nothing like the emails she sends, which are new school, join separate clubs, go out for “forwards” somebody else has put together. different sports, etc. If you do, people will no I quit reading them, but is there a way to longer perceive you as molded from the same politely stop her from disseminating nasty cookie cutter. Good luck. propaganda? I have tried fact-checking and Dear Abby: As a baby shower gift for sending corrections to her and to those on the my (soon-to-be) grandson, I plan on opening long list of people she has sent these emails. up a UTMA (Uniform Transfers to Minors) It doesn’t work. — Fact Checker account for his college education with a Dear Fact Checker: Because someone $5,000 initial deposit. My idea is to add sends you emails does not mean you must $1,000 every year on his birthday for the first read them all. Filter your email so that the five years. political rants go into a special folder, then Would it be tacky to challenge, or delete them en masse. DAYS GONE BY BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS 100 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Feb. 2, 1917 All traffic on the O.-W. R. & N. main line is held up today by a big snowslide at Bacon, four miles east of Union Junction, which caught the rotary plow and engine and turned it and the caboose over. Fortunately no one was hurt in the accident. Some time will be required to clear the track. There is now six feet of snow at Meacham and it is still snowing hard. 50 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Feb. 2, 1967 A young woman from Pendleton who has been all over the world for the U.S. Department of State has been listed in “Outstanding Young Women of America.” Harriet Isom, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Isom, was nominated for the distinction by her alma mater, Mills College, Calif. Miss Isom worked for the Department of Defense, with assignments in a number of foreign countries, before joining the state department. She is now en route to Niamey, Niger, Africa, where she will be economics officer at the U.S. Embassy. She is on a two-year assignment. 25 Years Ago From the East Oregonian Feb. 2, 1992 A fight following a high school basketball game in Umatilla between Riverside of Boardman and Umatilla on Jan. 7 left the athletic directors of both schools, both long- time high school coaches, dismayed and disturbed. The fight occurred on the street outside the school gymnasium after the game was over. Riverside player Marc Andreason was knocked down and suffered chipped teeth and a cut that required three stitches. Two Umatilla players were suspended from school temporarily and from the team for the remainder of the season as a result of their involvement, Umatilla coach Curt Marschner said the Friday after the fight. One Umatilla player was charged with fourth-degree assault. THIS DAY IN HISTORY BLONDIE DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN Today is the 33rd day of 2017. There are 332 days left in the year. This is Groundhog Day. Today’s Highlight in History: On Feb. 2, 1887, Punxsut- awney, Pennsylvania, held its first Groundhog Day festival. On this date: In 1653, New Amsterdam — now New York City — was incorporated. In 1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican-American War, was signed. In 1914, Charles Chaplin made his movie debut as the comedy short “Making a Living” was released by Keystone Film Co. The musical “Shameen Dhu,” featuring the song “Too Ra Loo Ra Loo Ral,” opened on Broadway. In 1925, the legendary Alaska Serum Run ended as the last of a series of dog mushers brought a life-saving treatment to Nome, the scene of a diphtheria epidemic, six days after the drug left Nenana. In 1932, Duke Ellington and His Orchestra recorded “It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)” for Brunswick Records. In 1942, a Los Angeles Times column by W.H. Anderson urged security measures against Japa- nese-Americans, arguing that a Japanese-American “almost inevitably ... grows up to be a Japanese, not an American.” In 1959, public schools in Arlington and Norfolk, Virginia, were racially deseg- regated without incident. In 1964, Ranger 6, a lunar probe launched by NASA, crashed onto the surface of the moon as planned, but failed to send back any TV images. In 1971, Idi Amin, having seized power in Uganda, proclaimed himself presi- dent. In 1980, NBC News reported the FBI had conducted a sting oper- ation targeting members of Congress using phony Arab businessmen in what became known as “Abscam,” a codename protested by Arab-Americans. In 1992, longtime “Miss America” emcee Bert Parks died in La Jolla, California, at age 77. Today’s Birthdays: Gossip columnist Liz Smith is 94. Former French President Valery Giscard d’Estaing is 91. Actor Robert Mandan is 85. Comedian Tom Smothers is 80. Rock singer-guitarist Graham Nash is 75. Televi- sion executive Barry Diller is 75. Actor Bo Hopkins is 73. Country singer Howard Bellamy (The Bellamy Brothers) is 71. TV chef Ina Garten is 69. Actor Jack McGee is 68. Actor Brent Spiner is 68. Rock musician Ross Valory (Journey) is 68. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, is 65. The president of South Korea, Park Geun-hye, is 65. Model Christie Brinkley is 63. Actor Michael Talbott is 62. Actress Kim Zimmer is 62. Actor Michael T. Weiss is 55. Actor-comedian Adam Ferrara is 51. Rock musician Robert DeLeo (Army of Anyone; Stone Temple Pilots) is 51. Singer Shakira is 40. Thought for Today: “Absence is to love what wind is to fire; it extinguishes the small, it inflames the great.” — Bussy-Rabutin, French soldier and writer (1618-1693). PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE