A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, June 7, 2022 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M. SCHULZ Stepfather wants more respect from daughters FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE B.C. PICKLES BEETLE BAILEY BY LYNN JOHNSTON BY MASTROIANNI AND HART BY BRIAN CRANE some things I regret. What are Dear Abby: I’ve been the your thoughts on my revamping stepfather of two girls for 18 and re-submitting another ver- years. They are 22 and 24 now. sion to the area newspaper his My wife and her ex-husband ad- obituary appeared in? — Redo opted them at birth. When they In The East were 2 and 4, he had an affair Dear Redo: Please accept my and left them. sympathy for your loss. Con- Why do these two girls look J EANNE tact the newspaper and ask that at HIM as their dad when I have P HILLIPS question. I have seen “In Memo- been the one who has always ADVICE riam” items published long after been here for them? They have the deceased has been buried. If never shown me much respect, you feel it would comfort you, it yet the man who adopted them and then left them and their mother for couldn’t hurt to ask. Dear Abby: My sister’s job requires another family they regard as their dad and respect him. — Hurt And Frustrated her to make presentations to profession- Dear Hurt: You have my sympathy. al groups. When she used the word “ir- This may have happened because their regardless” in a conversation with me, I mother never explained to them that the told her the correct word is “regardless.” person who left them failed to fulfill the I genuinely did not want her to embar- father role he had promised, and the man rass herself in a professional setting. Yesterday, she used the word “irre- who raised them — you — IS their dad. She also failed to insist they treat you gardless” again when we were talking. with the respect you deserved. If there is Should I correct her again, or let it go? blame to be laid, I blame her for this, not This situation is complicated by the fact that I have asked her to stop constantly them. Dear Abby: I am writing regarding correcting me, although her corrections my husband’s obituary. He died sudden- don’t usually involve grammar or word ly a year ago. Because of shock, anxi- usage. — Unsure In Florida Dear Unsure: You told your sister ety and pressure to get his obit into the newspaper before the weekend, I rushed once that the word she used was incor- it. I had never written an obituary before. rect. In light of your history with her, if My dear sister-in-law helped me, and we you repeat it, she may think you are try- finally finished it at 4 a.m. Since then, I ing to one-up her and resent it. P.S. Many people make this mistake, have been unhappy and uncomfortable with it. It wasn’t thorough or personal or so hold a good thought. Perhaps the au- loving. It was “just the facts,” and I have dience she’s making the presentation to always wanted to redo it. I also included won’t notice. BY MORT WALKER DAYS GONE BY 100 years ago — 1922 GARFIELD BY JIM DAVIS An effort is being made by the county court to get a contractor to take the contract for build- ing the rest of the Old Oregon Trail highway at the figures of the original estimate, according to a statement of County Judge I. M. Schan- nep today. This is held to be the one chance to effect the construction of the gap which now exists in the highway between Dead Man’s Pass and the Union county line as a result of the refusal of the state highway commission to accept bids offered recently at Portland. The Warren Construction Co. was low bidder, but the bid was more than the engineer’s estimate. A request was made of the highway commis- sion that the Oregon-Washington highway be extended another four miles beyond present plans from Pilot Rock. This would make it possible for Vinson to be reached this year by a good road, according to Judge Schannep. 50 years ago — 1972 BLONDIE BY DEAN YOUNG AND JOHN MARSHALL Pendleton Woolen Mills has begun a new service: trucks moving between its Portland shipping facility and the company’s Omaha, Neb., and Harrisburg, Pa., distribution centers. Included in the schedule are stops at Pend- leton, when needed. The 40-foot rigs carry supplies for Pendleton’s mills and factories and prepacked sportswear and blankets for retailers across the country. Each of the trucks is a “mobile billboard,” carrying the compa- ny’s blue and gold label on both sides and the rear door of the trailer as well as the Pendleton name on the cab and tractor. It is estimated that up to 600,000 people will see the trucks each week, or over 30 million impressions a year. 25 years ago — 1997 An inch of rain in 30 minutes nearly consumed John and Lea Van Houten’s home. Thick, sticky mud made its way across fields into their modest home, which sits a half a mile north of Pilot Rock on Highway 395. Rising water lifted the slate blue home from its foundation and gushed through its walls. Neighbors, friends and family members converged on the mud-coated house within the hour. Pick-up trucks, a horse trailer and back hoe were all instrumental in the effort to recover the Van Houten’s belongings. Three of the Van Houten’s pets were missing. Taffy, the goat, found her way into a floating dog house. Skittles the puppy was found across the highway and Scamper the puppy was discovered in the lawn mower shed. 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 June 7, 1965, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Griswold v. Connecti- cut, struck down, 7-2, a Connecticut law used to prosecute a Planned Par- enthood clinic in New Haven for providing con- traceptives to married couples. In 1712, Pennsylvania’s colonial assembly voted to ban the further impor- tation of slaves. In 1776, Richard Hen- ry Lee of Virginia offered a resolution to the Con- tinental Congress stat- ing “That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and inde- pendent States.” In 1892, Homer Plessy, a “Creole of color,” was arrested for refusing to leave a whites-only car of the East Louisiana Rail- road. (Ruling on his case, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld “separate but equal” racial segregation, a concept it renounced in 1954.) In 1942, the Battle of Midway ended in a decisive victory for Amer- ican naval forces over Imperial Japan, marking a turning point in the Pa- cific War. In 1993, the U.S. Su- preme Court ruled that religious groups could sometimes meet on school property after hours. Ground was broken for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. In 1998, in a crime that shocked the nation, James Byrd Jr., a 49-year-old Black man, was hooked by a chain to a pickup truck and dragged to his death in Jasper, Texas. (Two white men were later sentenced to death; one of them, Lawrence Rus- sell Brewer, was executed in 2011 and the other, John William King, was executed in April 2019. A third defendant received life with the possibility of parole.) In 2016, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Re- publican Donald Trump claimed their parties’ presidential nominations following contests in New Jersey, California, Mon- tana, New Mexico, North Dakota and South Da- kota. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE