A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS FOR BETTER OR WORSE COFFEE BREAK BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE Tuesday, March 16, 2021 DEAR ABBY Boyfriend takes charge after couple moves into his house Dear Abby: I have been with the less times. She ruined birthdays, same man for almost 30 years. We damaged other relationships — even are not married and have no chil- ruined my bachelorette party. I don’t dren together. He is 15 years older know why I still bother with her. I than I am. think because of our deep roots, it’s We have been living in his house hard to let go. for the past seven years. I feel more At the moment, we haven’t like a renter than a partner in this spoken in more than two months, Jeanne relationship. I give him money every and I know she’s upset with me yet Phillips month, and we sleep in separate again. Should I reach out and mend ADVICE rooms. He wants to control every- the bond? Do I use this as a stepping thing in his house, including how to stone to start moving on? I love her, clean, cook or what we eat. I bite my but I know it really is a toxic rela- lip to avoid starting a confrontation. tionship. — Off Again in New Jersey He is a lifelong bachelor, while I have two Dear Off Again: Please reread the last adult children and a couple of grandkids. I’m sentence of your letter. Do not bother reach- not sure how much more of this I can take. ing out and trying to mend the breach in your I work all day; he doesn’t. I want to leave, relationship. You cannot fix what’s wrong but at the same time, I care and worry about with this old friend, but you can move on. Her silence is giving you the opportunity. him. What should I do? — Disillusioned in Take it! Illinois Dear Disillusioned: Quit biting your Dear Abby: My son is getting married lip. Gather your courage and start an honest in a couple of weeks. Due to COVID-19, he and his fiancee are having to downsize the conversation with your housemate in which you tell him you have been unhappy with list of invitees. This includes asking those the status quo for a long time. Then outline who have already RSVP’d “yes” and/or have the changes that would make you happy. If already given them a wedding gift not to he isn’t willing to compromise, then pack attend. Should they return the wedding gifts your bags and leave because you will know to those they are disinviting to the wedding? the feelings you have for him are not mutual. — Wondering in the South Dear Abby: I’ve been “friends” with a Dear Wondering: Your son and his fian- woman for 25 years. For a time, we were best cee should at least offer to return the gifts. friends and did everything together, but we Considering the reason for the downsizing, couldn’t be more different. It caused many some of the no-longer-invited guests may fights and disagreements over the years. She tell them to keep them along with their good has deeply hurt and embarrassed me count- wishes, while others will not. DAYS GONE BY From the East Oregonian BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BLONDIE DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago March 16, 1921 Members of the Moosejaw, Canada, base- ball team were today invited to make Pend- leton their headquarters for spring training, the invitation being sent by wire by the Pend- leton Commercial Association through the president, James H. Sturgis. Carl Waters, formerly of Pendleton and who has played here in Western Tri State League games, now first baseman for the Canadian team, is in the city and declares that the manager and owner of the Moosejaw club is favorable to Pendleton as the location for a training camp. The team has been offered the free use of the Round-Up grounds and local fans prom- ise co-operation in securing games for the Canadians. Should they accept the offer, they would come to Pendleton April 10 and remain for three weeks, playing a game each Sunday. 50 Years Ago March 16, 1971 Wind, plus the breaking up of new farm- land and the lack of wind erosion programs on farms, has many of the residents of Umatilla, northern Morrow and Gilliam counties upset. Some of them, it was rumored at the wind erosion meeting at Boardman Friday after- noon, are seriously considering taking their problem to the courts. This could pit neigh- bor against neighbor. Most of the discussion was aimed at large operators, most of them absentee owners who buy raw land and in the winter start tearing it up with plans to install an irrigation system and produce a potato crop TODAY IN HISTORY BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN the same year. The ideal setup for deterring wind erosion in new development is to plant a cover crop in the summer or fall, when the ground is broken, and then plant the potato crop the next spring. As a rule this timeta- ble is not likely because of the economics of the situation. Wind erosion is of the greatest concern to the farmer when it blows out his own crop, or if his neighbor’s soil is wrecking his alfalfa crop and making his wife unhappy with additional housekeeping chores. 25 Years Ago March 16, 1996 Downtown Pendleton has something other towns want: old-fashioned architecture and charm. It’s the need to make the most of these natural assets that has spurred the formation of the Pendleton Downtown Revitalization Committee. The committee, not yet out of its infancy, has yet to outline firm goals. But its chairman, Jim MacKenzie, is already talking about the direction the months-old committee will take in the months to come. A minister at the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, MacK- enzie draws his experience from well beyond church walls. Before donning the collar five years ago, he spent 16 years as a Seattle banker, helping with the development of Seattle’s Pioneer Square. When MacKenzie looks out on Pendleton’s main street he views a future that pays home to the past. “We don’t want a West- ern theme park,” said MacKenzie, who pooh- poohs such projects as artificial. “We want to bring out the historic uniqueness of downtown Pendleton” and spur a vibrant marketplace. On March 16, 1945, during World War II, Amer- ican forces declared they had secured Iwo Jima, although pockets of Japanese resis- tance remained. In 18 02, P resident Thomas Jefferson signed a measure authorizing the establishment of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York. In 1926, rocket science pioneer Robert H. Goddard successfully tested the first liquid-fueled rocket at his Aunt Effie’s farm in Auburn, Massachusetts. In 1935, Adolf Hitler decided to break the mili- tary terms set by the Treaty of Versailles by ordering the rearming of Germany. In 1972, in a nationally broadcast address, President Richard Nixon called for a moratorium on court-ordered school busing to achieve racial desegregation. In 1984, William Buck- ley, the CIA station chief in Beirut, was kidnapped by Hezbollah militants (he was tortured by his captors and killed in 1985). In 1987, Massachu- setts Gov. Michael Dukakis announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination. In 1994, figure skater Tonya Harding pleaded guilty in Portland, OAregon, to conspiracy to hinder pros- ecution for covering up an attack on rival Nancy Kerri- gan, avoiding jail but draw- ing a $100,000 fine. In 2004, China declared victory in its fight against bird f lu, saying it had “stamped out” all its known cases. Today’s Bir thdays: Country singer Ray Walker (The Jordanaires) is 87. Game show host Chuck Woolery is 80. Country singer Robin Williams is 74. Actor Erik Estrada is 72. Bluegrass musician Tim O’Brien (Hot Rize; Earls of Leicester) is 67. Rock singer-musician Nancy Wilson (Heart) is 67. Folk singer Patty Griffin is 57. Actor Kimrie Lewis is 39. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE