A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, January 4, 2022 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Half-sister’s appearance brings awful memories FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE Dear Abby: I am a 46-year-old Dear Abby: A year ago, I widow. My husband of 18 years was contacted by a half-sister passed away 14 months ago. My I’ll call “Shyla,” who my mother three children are adults. Two of placed for adoption at birth. My them are still in the house, and mother passed away five years one, my son “Charlie,” has seri- ago. She was a horrible mother ous health issues. My husband who physically, verbally and was sick for five years prior to emotionally abused my brother J EANNE his death. and me. Giving Shyla up was the P HILLIPS Charlie gets upset when I best thing she ever did. I have ADVICE talk about being interested in spent years in therapy to work starting to date. He thinks I am through my painful childhood. going to abandon him again and Shyla barreled in like a train. I was honest with her about our mother that I should pay more attention to re- and how I grew up. But Shyla wants me connecting with my children. Charlie refuses to leave the house. to visit her and video-call her like we are close. When she asks questions about my I don’t think he loves me; I feel he just mother, I’m honest because I refuse to wants to control me. My other children are supportive, but they are independent. create a person who didn’t exist. I do not want a relationship with this Am I wrong for wanting to pursue life sister, or to have to talk about my abuser outside my home and grown children? for the rest of my life. Shyla makes me — Attempting To Go Forward Dear Attempting: You aren’t wrong feel horrible because I haven’t met her yet. I don’t WANT to meet her. Other for wanting companionship, and I’m not adoptees I have spoken to chide me on referring to the kind you can get from this, saying Shyla “has a right” to her your children. If Charlie is unable to live birth family. Advice, please. — Freaking independently and needs constant super- vision, you should be discussing options Out In North Carolina Dear Freaking Out: You have given for him such as respite care, so you can your half-sister what information you have a break. Because you mentioned that he has could. You are NOT obligated to have more contact with this half-sister than serious health issues, what are the plans you are comfortable with. If she asks to for him if you should predecease him? meet again, tell her it has taken years of This is an issue that should be hashed therapy to get past what was done to you out before there is a crisis, so there will and your brother, and that talking with be no surprises and Charlie can be reas- her is bringing back all of that trauma. If sured, which may allay his fears and help him to become less needy. she persists after that, block her. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL 100 years ago — 1922 The sport of skiing is a part of the fun and amusement of Umatilla county people. Of course, to take steep hills on the skis has been practiced for more years than one, but the sport has achieved a popularity this winter which indicates that it has a hold which never can be forgotten. About 30 people enjoyed the sport at Kamela yesterday. There were young people from Pendleton, Adams and La Grande, besides people of Kamela who spent the greater part of the day in skiing and coasting down the rugged sides of old Mount Baldy. The coast- way is about three-quarters of a mile long, local sportsmen report. 50 years ago — 1972 Farmers, rejoice! Though 1971 was near normal in every other way, it did bring above average precipitation, especially in the snow- pack in the Blue Mountains for this early in the season. All signs point to an abundant water supply next summer. McKay reservoir contains 43,700 acre feet of water, double the 22,070 of last year. Battle Mountain has a current snow depth of 25.6 inches; water content is 6.7. A year ago Battle Mountain, at 4,340 feet, had 10.4 inches of snow with a water content of 1.7. Emigrant Springs, at an elevation of 3,925 feet, has 42 inches of snow with a water content of 10.5. This compares with 10.2 inches of snow and water content of 2.5 last year. 25 years ago — 1997 The top 10 local stories of 1996: 1) Gordon Smith edges Tom Bruggere to earn a seat in the U.S. Sentate. 2) Umatilla will be home to a state prison, bringing 500 jobs. 3) State tenta- tively approves permits for construction of an incinerator at the Umatilla Chemical Depot. 4) Voters approve a $13-million bond measure for a new county jail that will hold three times as many inmates. 5) Murder, past and pres- ent: A 1992 murder is solved when a tip leads to the body and an eventual guilty plea by the victim’s husband, LuRay Batterton. Ernest Taber of Pendleton is charged in the murder of a 6-year-old Umatilla boy. 6) Pendleton opens its new City Hall/Library in the remodeled Helen McCune building. 7) February flooding ravages parts of Umatilla County. 8) Deputy John Trumbo defeats Sheriff Gordon Campbell in a contentious November election. 9) Hermis- ton volunteers build a 13,000-square-foot play- ground in five days. 10) Wal-Mart — a store in Pendleton and plans to begin construction of a regional distribution center at Hermiston next spring. TODAY IN HISTORY DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY SCOTT ADAMS BY PARKER AND HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN On Jan. 4, 2007, Nan- cy Pelosi was elected the first female speaker of the House as Democrats took control of Congress. In 1821, the first na- tive-born American saint, Elizabeth Ann Seton, died in Emmitsburg, Mary- land. In 1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his State of the Union ad- dress, called for legislation to provide assistance for the jobless, elderly, impov- erished children and the disabled. In 1948, Burma (now called Myanmar) became independent of British rule. In 1964, Pope Paul VI began a visit to the Holy Land, the first papal pil- grimage of its kind In 1965, President Lyn- don B. Johnson delivered his State of the Union ad- dress in which he outlined the goals of his “Great Society.” In 1974, President Richard Nixon refused to hand over tape recordings and documents subpoe- naed by the Senate Water- gate Committee. In 1987, 16 people were killed when an Amtrak train bound from Wash- ington, D.C., to Boston collided with Conrail locomotives that had crossed into its path from a side track in Chase, Maryland. In 1990, Charles Stu- art, who’d claimed that he’d been wounded and his pregnant wife fatally shot by a robber, leapt to his death off a Boston bridge after he himself be- came a suspect. In 1999, Europe’s new currency, the euro, got off to a strong start on its first trading day, rising against the dollar on world cur- rency markets. Former professional wrestler Jesse Ventura took the oath of office as Minnesota’s gov- ernor. In 2002, Sgt. 1st Class Nathan Ross Chapman, a U.S. Army Special Forces soldier, was killed by small-arms fire during an ambush in eastern Af- ghanistan; he was the first American military death from enemy fire in the war against terrorism. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE