A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Thursday, July 29, 2021 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ New living arrangement includes a proposition FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE Dear Abby: Six months into sition has already made things weird, but let it go — for now. I doubt this the pandemic I was furloughed, is something Josie is “too chicken” then laid off a few months later. to ask you. If he raises the subject Because of the loss of income, I could no longer afford my rent and again, make it plain that you are not was forced to move. It was tough into threesomes and not to ask again. finding anything affordable in the If he presses further, inform your old area. A good friend from college college chum, pack your bags and go (“Josie”) and her husband own a big to your parents’. Jeanne Phillips home with a detached guest house, Dear Abby: My husband’s ADVICE and offered me the opportunity to daughter “Crystal” is married to rent for next to nothing until I found “Jeremy,” who is a racist. I know a new job. I was super happy about this because of comments he has it because we are very close friends from made over the past five years. At our only college. granddaughter’s first birthday celebration, Josie, her husband and I often BBQ my husband and Jeremy got into a heated together and hang out watching movies. One argument (a little politics, a little racism). night recently, Josie had to work late, and her Since we live out of state, we were supposed husband and I had dinner and wine. We got to stay with them, but we had to leave. Jeremy started screaming at my husband, calling him pretty drunk, and I decided to turn in early. a pedophile and some other awful names. Before I went to bed, Josie’s husband asked me to have a threesome. He said Josie was Crystal is demanding an apology from us going to ask me, but she was nervous about and refuses to communicate or send photos of the baby until he does. My husband feels that it, so she chickened out. I think my jaw must have hit the ground. I didn’t know what to say, Crystal’s mind is made up and she will defend so I told him I’d “think about it.” her husband no matter what, so there’s no A week has passed and Josie hasn’t point. I hate that we’re at an impasse. She has cut me off as well. Do you have any sugges- mentioned anything about the threesome, but I’m scared to bring it up. I don’t know if tions? — Cut Off in the South Dear Cut Off: Crystal, whose views on her husband was telling the truth. They may race seem to coincide with her husband’s, has want a threesome, but I’m not into it. If I say you sidelined already. When your husband “no” it might make things weird between us. What should I do? Should I ask Josie about it, craves contact with his daughter and his or move out back home with my parents until grandchild, he will hold his nose, reach out I find a new job? — Not What I Bargained and offer to mend fences. Until that happens, listen to what he is telling you and stay out For Dear Not: The husband’s drunken propo- of this mess. DAYS GONE BY from the East Oregonian BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago July 29, 1921 Besides being the oldest town in Umatilla County, Umatilla has another distinction that belongs here, and no sister town in the broad expanse of the county can take it away from her or hope to compete with her. This distinction is the best bathing beach in the Northwest. Only recently has the beach been capitalized for what it is worth, but now it is growing so rapidly in popularity that it prom- ises to become one of the best places in the county to spend a pleasant holiday. The beach is not a long one, but it is sand, and the slope is gradual, and those two conditions are very necessary. Then the business men here have helped Mother Nature by anchoring a heavy scow just off the beach. There is a swing suspended from the top of the scow, and two springboards for those who enjoy diving. 50 Years Ago July 29, 1971 The 100,000-acre Boardman Industrial Park under lease to the Boeing Co. has several plus factors that would be required for its use as a space shuttle base, but a major minus on the site is its northern location comparison to other sites. On this score, sites closer to the equator would have an advantage, it was pointed out by a National Aeronautics and Space Administration team here Wednes- day. Four of the six-member site inspection team from NASA and the Air Force spoke to Morrow County public officials and staff members of the Oregon Economic Develop- ment Division. It was significant in the Board- man meeting that the only visible “pitch” made to bring the space shuttle base to Board- man came from Gov. Tom McCall’s office and the economic development division. 25 Years Ago July 29, 1996 It’s back home. After 86 years in Port- land, a basalt boulder that may be as many as 15,000 years old has been returned to the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. A 60-ton crane from Shockman Brothers of Hermiston was used to place the 10-ton rock in its final resting place Saturday morning. It’s now in the center of the Warriors Memorial adjacent to the tribal offices in Mission. The Wallula Stone is covered with petroglyphs. The CTUIR claimed the stone under the 1990 federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, which allows tribes to reclaim ancient arti- facts that belonged to their ancestors. Accord- ing to the tribal elders who examined the petroglyph in 1916, the stone was instrumen- tal in promoting sacred rituals and served as a landmark for a gathering place of Columbia River tribes. 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 July 29, 1958, Pres- ident Dwight D. Eisen- hower signed the National Aeronautics and Space Act, creating NASA. I n 18 5 6 , G e r m a n composer Robert Schumann died in Endenich at age 46. In 1890, artist Vincent van Gogh, 37, died of an apparently self-inf licted gunshot wound in Auvers- sur-Oise, France. In 1914, transcontinental telephone service in the U.S. became operational with the first test conversation between New York and San Francisco. Massachusetts’ Cape Cod Canal, offering a shortcut across the base of the peninsula, was officially opened to shipping traffic. In 1965, The Beatles’ second feature film, “Help!,” had its world premiere in London. In 1967, an accidental rocket launch on the deck of the supercarrier USS Forr- estal in the Gulf of Tonkin resulted in a fire and explo- sions that killed 134 service- men. (Among the survivors was future Arizona senator John McCain, a U.S. Navy lieutenant commander who narrowly escaped with his life.) In 1968, Pope Paul the Sixth reaffirmed the Roman Catholic Church’s stance against artificial methods of birth control. In 1974, singer Cass Elliot died in a London hotel room at age 32. I n 1975, P resident Gerald R. Ford became the first U.S. president to visit the site of the Nazi concen- tration camp Auschwitz in Poland. In 1980, a state funeral was held in Cairo, Egypt, for the deposed Shah of Iran, who had died two days earlier at age 60. In 1981, Britain’s Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer in a glittering cere- mony at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. (The couple divorced in 1996.) In 1986, a federal jury in New York found that the National Football League had committed an anti- trust violation against the rival United States Football League. But in a hollow victory for the USFL, the jury ordered the NFL to pay token damages of only three dollars. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE