B6 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Thursday, July 11, 2019 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Friendship ends after birthday party joke goes wildly wrong FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER Dear Abby: I recently attended a straight or cisgender. friend’s party that was being given to I’m sorry that the young per- son was embarrassed. Your apol- celebrate their son’s 18th birthday. I ogy should have been directed at thought it would be cheeky and fun them, not their mother. But since the to buy him a risque card from an mother has now decreed you persona adult boutique, thinking everyone non grata, you will have to accept it. would get a good laugh, and we’d It’s unfortunate. The family overre- have something to roast the young acted. What could have been han- man with. When he opened the card, J eanne dled as a simple teachable moment he had this look of horror on his face, P hilliPs was blown out of proportion. ran out of the room all teary-eyed ADVICE Dear Abby: I am about to blow and went directly to his bedroom. my top! I am a married father of His mother picked up the card and two in the military who works 12 immediately asked me to leave. I hours daily to support my family. My wife was really embarrassed but unsure about the and I are college grads and have been mar- reason. ried five years. For those years we have main- I gave them a week or so to cool off. I tained residence in Hawaii. My wife doesn’t called back only to be informed by the mother work and tries to run a day care that is mildly that I had violated her son’s sanctity of sexual successful. orientation because he identifies as a “they” Our home is always dirty because, as she and “prefers androgynous boys to women.” puts it, she is not a housemaid. She doesn’t She went on to explain that as a result of cook often either. Many times I come home my “indiscriminate sexism,” I’m no longer so tired I can’t see, and the house is a mess. allowed around the family. This has caused arguments. I feel I should’ve been informed of the My thinking is, if she’s not going to take child’s orientation being such an important care of the house, she should get a job and help aspect of his ... or rather, “their” identity, and with the finances. The money she gets from tried to explain it was an honest mistake and the day care doesn’t go toward the household. would never happen again. My friend said the She considers it her spending money. damage was done, and they can’t forgive that I am ready to bounce and find greener kind of arrogance and blatant disrespect for pastures. I have tried talking to her, but she “their” gender identity and sexual orientation. ignores my complaints and plays the victim. Was I insensitive for not asking first, or We have already tried counseling. It doesn’t should the parents have taken the initiative to work because she goes back to her normal inform me so I wouldn’t make such an egre- gious error in what I assumed was a well- self afterward. Help! — Peeved in the Pacific Dear Peeved: Marriage is supposed to be rounded friendship? Any advice would be a partnership and, from what you have writ- great. — Wanting to Scream in Eugene ten, your wife is unwilling to contribute to it. I Dear Wanting: I think one lesson to be can’t change her and neither can you. Because learned here is that some people are not com- fortable with sexual humor. Another is that counseling hasn’t resolved your obvious lack of compatibility, it’s time to consult a lawyer. it is a mistake to assume that everyone is DAYS GONE BY GARFIELD BLONDIE DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago From the East Oregonian July 11, 1919 Tomorrow morning will witness the open- ing of Pendleton’s newest financial institution, the Inland Empire bank, situated at the corner of Main and Court streets. The new bank will start business with a capitalization of $250,000 which is exceeded by only two banks in the state outside of Portland. J.W. Maloney, 36 years a resident of Umatilla county, is pres- ident of the city’s newest bank. The Inland Empire bank received its charter from the state on March 17, 1919, and has also been made a member of the federal reserve bank in the twelfth district. 50 Years Ago From the East Oregonian July 11, 1969 The 1966 Ferrari which topped 160 miles an hour on Interstate 80 North a few months ago probably won’t be sold at auction after all. The sports car was impounded when its owner, Daniel James Gruener, 23, Ketchum, Idaho, was arrested for possession marijuana following a high-speed chase by Oregon State Police. A show cause hearing was conducted this week in Umatilla County Circuit Court on whether District Attorney Joe Smith could sell the auto. Proceeds would go to the coun- ty’s general fund. The prospect of auctioning TODAY IN HISTORY BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN off the Italian auto dimmed considerably when Lucretia G. Goldsmith, La Jolla, Calif., a rela- tive of Gruener, showed that she held a $17,000 lien on the auto. Circuit Court Judge Henry Kaye said the state was within its rights in seiz- ing the car, and planning to sell it, but that any proceeds from the sale would have to go first toward satisfying the lien. Car buffs say that is more than the Ferrari would bring at auction. 25 Years Ago From the East Oregonian July 11, 1994 Swimming spectators at the Pendleton Invi- tational Swim Meet had their need for speed fulfilled this weekend. Toby Wilcox of Herm- iston led a group of swimmers from across the state who broke 20 meet records at the annual summer event. Wilcox broke three meet records. The 18-year-old bettered Scott Ericson’s 1989 mark (57.65) in the 100 meter freestyle race by more than a second with a time of 56.42 seconds. Wilcox broke his own record that he set in 1993 in the 50-meter free- style race, finishing in a time of 25.31 seconds compared to last year’s mark of 26.19 seconds. The Hermiston swimmer also broke the meet record in the 100-meter butterfly with a race time of 1:02.57. The old mark of 1:02.90 was set in 1983 by Bart Pippenger. Wilcox also cap- tured first in the 200-meter freestyle and the 400-meter individual medley. On July 11, 1972, the World Chess Championship opened as grandmasters Bobby Fischer of the United States and defending cham- pion Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union began play in Reykjavik, Iceland. (Fischer won after 21 games.) In 1859, Big Ben, the great bell inside the famous London clock tower, chimed for the first time. In 1914, Babe Ruth made his Major League baseball debut, pitching the Boston Red Sox to a 4-3 victory over Cleveland. In 1915, the Chicago Sunday Tribune ran an arti- cle titled, “Blues Is Jazz and Jazz Is Blues.” (It’s believed to be one of the earliest, if not the earliest, uses of the word “jazz” as a musical term by a newspaper.) In 1937, American com- poser and pianist George Gershwin died at a Los Angeles hospital of a brain tumor; he was 38. In 1955, the U.S. Air Force Academy swore in its first class of cadets at its tem- porary quarters at Lowry Air Force Base in Colorado. In 1960, the novel “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee was first pub- lished by J.B. Lippincott and Co. In 1979, the abandoned U.S. space station Skylab made a spectacular return to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere and showering debris over the Indian Ocean and Australia. Today’s Birthdays: Actress Susan Seaforth Hayes is 76. Singer Peter Murphy is 62. Actress Lisa Rinna is 56. Rock musician Scott Shriner (Weezer) is 54. Pop-rock singer Andrew Bird is 46. Rapper Lil’ Kim is 44. Pop-jazz singer-musician Peter Cincotti is Actor David Henrie is 30. Actor Connor Paolo is 29. Tennis player Caroline Wozniacki is 29. . Thought for Today: “Life is a lot like jazz — it’s best when you impro- vise.” — George Gershwin (1898-1937). PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE