A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, May 31, 2022 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Teenager wants to join parents on trip abroad FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE are milestone birthdays such as Dear Abby: I’m a senior in the one that’s approaching for high school, and I come from a your dad. Your mother should family that is financially stable be forgiven for ensuring it will but unable to travel often. We be “extra special.” If you feel usually travel only once a year an itch to travel, if you don’t in the summer, and for the most already have one, consider get- part, we’re not able to travel very ting a part-time job so you can far or stay for long. J EANNE afford a getaway with friends or For the past three years, our P HILLIPS a student or church group. vacation plans have been on ADVICE Dear Abby: My adult son hold due to the pandemic and got so furious with me that he other concerns. My parents called me, yelled vicious things have been on two trips across the country in the past 12 months. I ac- and threatened to cut me out of his life. cept that they’re a married couple and I’ve never been spoken to that way be- occasionally want to travel without the fore. What made him so angry was that rest of their family. However, recently it came to my attention that Mom bought I didn’t thank his mother-in-law for an two tickets to Europe for her and Dad as email she sent wishing me happy birth- a birthday gift. She used the money she day. I had received 30 email birthday had been saving for a family vacation to wishes that day and didn’t acknowledge any of them. I would have thanked some- pay for them. I feel betrayed. I was under the impres- one who’d gone to the trouble of calling sion that we couldn’t afford a vacation at or sending an actual card. I don’t think this time, or that we were still waiting for I behaved improperly, but maybe there’s the chaos of the pandemic to settle be- some rule that slipped by me. Your fore traveling, but my mother was happy thoughts? — Unhappy Birthday In Texas Dear Unhappy: The polite way to to spend the money on a vacation for her deal with email special occasion wishes and Dad. My dad is turning 50, and I under- is to either acknowledge them individu- stand it’s a very special occasion. Howev- ally or do an email “blast” thanking er, I can’t help but wonder why I haven’t everyone for remembering you. To have received so much as a dinner after being remained stone silent was ungracious. accepted into my top college and earning HOWEVER, for your son to have gone two scholarships. Am I overreacting? — off the deep end, yelled “vicious things” and threatened to cut you out of his life Wanting A Getaway In New York Dear Wanting: While family vaca- was uncalled for, and whether or not you tions are wonderful and memorable, so receive one, you deserve an apology. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY 100 years ago — 1922 GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS Wanted — a buckaroo who can ride Look- out, the r’aring horse out Ukiah way! This is the appeal and the challenge which has been sent out to the men who tame wild horses by boosters of the Cowboys’ Convention which will be held at Ukiah July 3 and 4. Lookout is touted as a second No-name by the south- ern end horse lovers and they are so strong for the merits of their “find” that they would welcome an opportunity to see the two horses in competition. Lookout is a native to the south end of the county and as long as he has an even chance he has always succeeded in getting out from under the best riders that have tried to tame him. He has been ridden a time or two, but only after the riders took advantage of him. He was ridden once in a deep snow when it was impossible for him to get into action. 50 years ago — 1972 BLONDIE BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL Central Elementary School has been involved this year in a Title I program called CRAFTS which is designed to improve reading skills of pupils. CRAFTS means “Creative Resources Assembled For Teach- ing Students,” said Lou Morello, principal of the Milton-Freewater school. “Using crafts as a catalyst,” Morello said, “the student is forced to improve his reading. He has to make out a job sheet, read instructions and labels on the materials, write and verbalize — in other words, he develops his basic skills.” More than 100 children choose their own projects, such as woodworking, macrame or bottle cutting. 25 years ago — 1997 Farmers and ranchers in this area have long understood the nuisance of yellow starthistle, a noxious plant that spreads quickly on farm and ranch land. Now they have a new weapon to combat the pesky weed: sheep — and lots of them. The sheep recently proved their ability to clear infestations of the thistle at the East- ern Oregon Regional Airport in Pendleton. Ron Edmondson, airport operations super- visor, said 400 head of sheep were brought in to munch star thistle on 640 acres of airport property. In six weeks the sheep scoured the acreage and nipped the noxious plant to the ground. Although the sheep eat the thistle, they do not completely destroy the plants. In the fall, the sheep will be brought back. Using the sheep to control the thistle is saving thou- sands of dollars, said Edmondson. In the last few years, his budget to combat the plant has skyrocketed from $800 to $8,500 due to the cost of using aerial spray planes. 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 May 31, 1889, some 2,200 people in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, perished when the South Fork Dam collapsed, sending 20 million tons of water rushing through the town. In 1790, President George Washington signed into law the first U.S. copyright act. In 1921, a riot erupted in Tulsa, Oklahoma, as white mobs began looting and leveling the affluent Black district of Green- wood; hundreds are be- lieved to have died. In 1949, former State Department official and accused spy Alger Hiss went on trial in New York, charged with perjury (the jury deadlocked, but Hiss was convicted in a second trial). In 1977, the Trans- Alaska oil pipeline, three years in the making de- spite objections from envi- ronmentalists and Alaska Natives, was completed. (The first oil began flow- ing through the pipeline 20 days later.) In 1989, House Speaker Jim Wright, dogged by questions about his ethics, an- nounced he would resign. (Tom Foley later succeed- ed him.) In 2009, Dr. George Tiller, a provider of abor- tions, was shot and killed in a Wichita, Kansas, church. (the gunman was later convicted of first-de- gree murder and sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole for 50 years.) Millvina Dean, the last survivor of the 1912 sinking of the RMS Ti- tanic, died in Southamp- ton, England at 97. In 2014, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, the only Ameri- can soldier held prisoner in Afghanistan, was freed by the Taliban in exchange for five Afghan detainees from the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. (Bergdahl, who’d gone missing in June 2009, later pleaded guilty to endan- gering his comrades by walking away from his post in Afghanistan; his sentence included a dis- honorable discharge, a re- duction in rank and a fine, but no prison time.) PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE