A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Thursday, February 24, 2022 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Brother’s dying wish has become one-sided effort FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE hear.) We were using American Dear Abby: I am one of six Sign Language to communicate. adult siblings. Our youngest A group walked past us, saw we brother, “Clark,” died of cancer were using sign language and as- five years ago. He was my best sumed neither of us could hear. friend. As he was dying, Clark One of them told her friends asked me to keep his wife, “Liz,” we were deaf and dumb. When and his children in the family. I the server came to my table to have tried my best. J EANNE take our order and they realized Every year, I have a large P HILLIPS I could hear, they were visibly family Christmas party. Liz and ADvICE surprised. her children attend and seem to The speaker did not appear have a good time. I call or text to be embarrassed by what she her monthly, but I rarely receive a reply. She did text me happy birthday. I had said. The woman’s back was turned was OK with this until I heard from my to my friend, so my friend was unaware nephew (Clark’s son) that there was a of it. (Thank heavens, because my friend memorial service for him. When I asked can read lips.) I didn’t say anything at the him who was there, he said everybody. time and let it go. Should I have? I didn’t because their It really hurt because I wasn’t informed, table was near ours, and I was afraid the nor were any of my siblings. I want to respect Clark’s wishes, but woman would have gotten ruder and even before this, Liz didn’t seem to re- made the whole dining experience bad. spect my nuclear family. I don’t know Should I have said something to the man- what to do going forward because I have ager or server and sat at another table? If such sad and angry feelings over not be- the manager had said something to her, I ing invited to his memorial. — Conflicted doubt she would have admitted what she said. — Not Right In Ohio Sis In The East Dear Not Right: You were right Dear Sis: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your brother. What you not to challenge the woman who said should do is call your former sister-in-law that. If she wasn’t embarrassed when it and ask her WHY you and your siblings turned out you could hear clearly, little were excluded from the memorial, which you could say would have shamed her. is a shocking oversight. Then, if her apol- There was nothing the restaurant man- ogy is not satisfactory, consider yourself ager could do about this woman’s breach relieved of that deathbed promise, which of etiquette. You, however, could have asked to change your table if you were clearly hasn’t been appreciated. Dear Abby: I was recently in a res- no longer comfortable seated next to that taurant with a friend who is deaf. (I can party. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY 100 years ago — 1922 GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS Monsieur La Grippe is an unwelcome guest at many houses in Pendleton and Umatilla county, and because of his presence, there are a great many persons who are unable to be at their desks or in their offices to transact busi- ness as usual. Men and women alike are feeling the effects of the disease, but so far it has been in a mild form, and sufferers from the winter complaint have not been seriously ill. James H. Sturgis, Pat Lonergan, Roy Ritner and C. I. Barr, local men who planned to attend the meet- ing of the Baker Chamber of Commerce were prevented from going on account of illness. 50 years ago — 1972 BLONDIE BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL Two Umatilla county undercover narcotics agents have been arrested in Spokane, Wash., and charged with the strongarm robbery of an 18-year-old youth. As a result, Umatilla County Sheriff’s Deputy Paul Jones has charged the pair with unauthorized use of a vehicle that he loaned them for their undercover work. The pair have also been charged with posses- sion of amphetamines. The complaint Jones filed against them in Umatilla County District Court says they had agreed to use the car only in Umatilla County for transportation while investigating narcotics traffic. The two men were financed in their narcotics undercover work by $200 obtained for them by Jones from the Umatilla County Court. The money came from the budget of Dist. Atty. R. P. Smith who said it was done without his approval. 25 years ago — 1997 Jack Palmer was an employee of Boardman rather than an independent contractor the entire time he worked as city manager, the Public Employees Retirement System concluded after an investigation was launched when a newspa- per reporter contacted PERS about Palmer’s employment status as part of a follow-up to a grand jury indictment. A Morrow County grand jury indicted Palmer on 18 counts of theft and official misconduct Dec. 11, alleging he used city employees and equipment to further a personal project. The Boardman City Council suspended Palmer on Dec. 24 but voted to use him as a consultant for ongoing city affairs while continuing to pay his $3,700 monthly salary. He is scheduled to enter a plea in Morrow County Circuit Court on March 7. The city could owe as much as $50,000, or up to 15% of Palmer’s earnings since he began working there in 1993. Boardman’s city attorney, M. D. Van Valken- burgh has said the city will fight the PERS deci- sion classifying Palmer as an employee. 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 Feb. 24, 1942, the SS Struma, a charter ship attempting to carry nearly 800 Jewish refugees from Romania to British-man- dated Palestine, was tor- pedoed by a Soviet sub- marine in the Black Sea; all but one of the refugees perished. In 1868, the U.S. House of Representatives impeached President An- drew Johnson by a vote of 126-47 following his attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton; Johnson was later acquitted by the Sen- ate. In 1981, a jury in White Plains, New York, found Jean Harris guilty of second-degree murder in the fatal shoot- ing of “Scarsdale Diet” author Dr. Herman Tar- nower. In 1986, the Supreme Court struck down, 6-3, an Indianapolis ordinance that would have allowed women injured by some- one who had seen or read pornographic material to sue the maker or seller of that material. In 1988, in a ruling that expanded legal pro- tections for parody and satire, the Supreme Court unanimously overturned a $150,000 award that the Rev. Jerry Falwell had won against Hustler magazine and its publisher, Larry Flynt. In 2002, the Salt Lake City Olympics came to a close, the same day Canada won its first hockey gold in 50 years and three cross-country skiers were thrown out of the games for using a performance-enhancing drug. In 2011, Discovery, the world’s most traveled spaceship, thundered into orbit for the final time, heading toward the Inter- national Space Station on a journey marking the be- ginning of the end of the shuttle era. In 2015, the Justice Department announced that George Zimmerman, the former neighborhood watch volunteer who fa- tally shot Trayvon Martin in a 2012 confrontation, would not face federal charges. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE