Tuesday, June 29, 2021 PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK East Oregonian A11 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Wedding plans reveal deep divide for couple FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER Dear Abby: Against my better than I am. We had a relationship for judgment, I agreed to allow my about a year, which ended six years ago. Since then, we have remained parents to pay for our upcoming friends and occasionally hooked wedding. It was something they up a few times. The short relation- pretty much insisted upon. My ship we had was close to perfect. He fiance was upset by my decision broke it off with me because he said because he fears I’m in collusion with them to make a big show of it. he couldn’t give me the relationship For the last 10 months he has I really wanted and I would end up Jeanne been suggesting we nix the religious resenting him or even hating him Phillips ceremony and get married privately. for it. ADVICE I am hurt because while I don’t want Although I didn’t understand that a big party, I have always wanted a when he said it, I understand now he was right. The problem is, I cannot full ceremony with my friends and family. I have been trying to assuage his seem to get over him. I’ve had two unsuc- fears because I know he will appreciate the cessful relationships since. They weren’t the wedding on the day of, but he feels neglected. same as it was with him. I don’t know what How can we compromise so that neither of us to do. feels resentful? — Party Of Two A few months ago, I cut off everything Dear Party: If you and your fiance with him, and we haven’t talked in many haven’t had premarital counseling — and months. It’s not working! I’m still in love it’s apparent from your letter that you haven’t with him and can’t get him out of my head. I — I urge you to get some right away. The two mentioned the age difference because I had a of you are encountering serious issues that hard time with it, but he didn’t. What else can need to be resolved before your wedding. I do? I’m afraid to start anything with some- That he doesn’t trust you and feels you might one new. — Hopeless in New York be conspiring with your parents against him Dear Hopeless: What you are describ- ing is painful, but it’s happening because is a huge red flag. When he says he wants to “nix the reli- you haven’t accepted the reason the two of gious ceremony,” is he talking about the reli- you broke up. He said he couldn’t give you gious aspect of it — or what he perceives to the relationship you really wanted — what- ever that was. You are not in love with this be a circus surrounding it? If it’s the former, it could affect the way you raise your chil- man. You are in love with the fantasy of the dren. If a compromise can be reached, coun- person you wanted him to be. Once that fact seling will help you to determine what you is firmly in place in your head, you’ll be able may need to do next. Please don’t wait. Start to move forward, although it may take help from a licensed psychotherapist to accom- now. plish it. Whatever it takes, please do it, so Dear Abby: For a long time, I have been you can start living your life. in love with a man who is 15 years younger DAYS GONE BY From the East Oregonian GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago June 29, 1921 Damage to the extent of approximately $165,500 was done last night when a fire, which started from a grass blaze destroyed four grain warehouses, an elevator and many thousand bushels of grain at Myrick’s station, northeast of Pendleton. The elevator was the property of the Myrick Elevator Co. and this company also lost one warehouse. Two ware- houses were lost by the Pacific Coast Grain Elevator Co. and H.W. Collins had one ware- house destroyed. Othie Reeder was one of the heaviest losers by the fire. He had 9,000 bush- els of wheat in the elevator, and it is reported that he had no insurance. Another 9,000 was stored in the Collins warehouse, and this lot was also not insured. 50 Years Ago June 29, 1971 Tom L. Smith of Pendleton has received research fellowship award from the depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare’s National Institute of Mental Health to support his continued work in the area of psychol- ogy. The NIMH fellowship award will cover Smith’s last two years as a graduate student in social psychology at the University of Oregon. The particular research projects to be covered by this award examine the resulting social role of the aging individual, the type of interpersonal interactions and relationships to which such an individual is subjected and the resulting self-feelings, depression, and many of the characteristics which are said to be caused by old age. 25 Years Ago June 29, 1996 Bankruptcy has knocked the wind from the sails of Kenetech Windpower’s proposed Helix-area energy project. The San Francisco company’s Chapter 11 reorganization has left its projects in limbo, including a 25-megawatt Vansycle Ridge Windplant that would string about 65-70 wind machines across Umatilla and Walla Walla counties. Randy Dorran, a wheat farmer in the project areas, says he hasn’t been contacted by the company since its Chapter 11 announcement. But he is hopeful the company may be able to carry through with the project. “I think it’s really feasible,” Dorran said. “Our tests showed adequate wind.” TODAY IN HISTORY DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN On June 29, 1927, the first trans-Pacific airplane flight was completed as U.S. Army Air Corps Lt. Lester J. Mait- land and Lt. Albert F. Hege- nberger arrived at Wheeler Field in Hawaii aboard the Bird of Paradise, an Atlan- tic-Fokker C-2, after flying 2,400 miles from Oakland, California, in 25 hours, 50 minutes. In 1520, Montezuma II, the ninth and last emperor of the Aztecs, died in Tenoch- titlan under unclear circum- stances (some say he was killed by his own subjects; others, by the Spanish). In 1613, London’s original Globe Theatre, where many of Shakespeare’s plays were performed, was destroyed by a fire sparked by a cannon shot during a performance of “Henry VIII.” In 1946, authorities in British-ruled Palestine arrested more than 2,700 Jews in an attempt to stamp out extremists. In 1956, film star Marilyn Monroe married playwright Arthur Miller in a civil cere- mony in White Plains, New York. (The couple also wed in a Jewish ceremony on July 1; the marriage lasted 4½ years). In 1967, Jerusalem was reunified as Israel removed barricades separating the Old City from the Israeli sector. In 1970, the United States ended a two-month military offensive into Cambodia. In 1995, the space shuttle Atlantis and the Russian Mir space station linked in orbit, beginning a historic five- day voyage as a single ship. A department store in Seoul, South Korea, collapsed, kill- ing at least 500 people. Actor Lana Turner died in Century City, California, at age 74. In 2006, the Supreme Court ruled, 5-3, that Presi- dent George W. Bush’s plan to try Guantanamo Bay detainees in military tribu- nals violated U.S. and inter- national law. In 2009, disgraced finan- cier Bernard Madoff received a 150-year sentence for his multibillion-dollar fraud. (Madoff died in prison in April 2021.) Today’s Birthdays: Song- writer L. Russell Brown is 81. Rock singer Colin Hay (Men At Work) is 68. Actor Maria Conchita Alonso is 66. Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter is 58. Actor Chris- tina Chang is 50. Rap DJ and record producer DJ Shadow is 49. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE