Peanuts by Charles Schulz for November 07, 2023

  1. Zooey girl
    ronaldspence  about 1 year ago

    yay Grandma Van Pelt!

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    TampaFanatic1  about 1 year ago

    Nice shout out to all the “Rosey the Riveters” out there! Sadly there are very few from “The Greatest Generation” still around to thank but back when this strip first came out many were still alive like my Mom, my aunt and the countless others who helped out during war time.

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    knutdl  about 1 year ago

    Sisters Are Doin’ It for Themselves (Eurythmics)

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    hariseldon59  about 1 year ago

    Is this the same grandmother that keeps trying to make Linus give up his blanket?

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    Qiset  about 1 year ago

    My mother worked in the Willow Run assembly plant.

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    Maizing  about 1 year ago

    My mom joined the army and drove trucks. She spent time in the Philippines and Australia.

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    billyk75  about 1 year ago

    Hear! Hear!

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    VegaAlopex  about 1 year ago

    Was her name Rosie?

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    Arthur Hermanson Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Amen, Lucy, Amen!

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    Darryl Heine  about 1 year ago

    YAY!

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    Ellis97  about 1 year ago

    She sounds like a real multi faced woman. I still can’t figure out why she hates Linus’ blanket.

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    jagedlo  about 1 year ago

    How many in these times would be making that sacrifice?

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  13. Gameguy49
    Gameguy49 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    In WWII, my Mother-in-law was a “Rosie-riveter” at Boeing Aircraft of Canada on Sea Island (Vancouver BC) and my Mum was in the Royal Air Force in London in the barrage balloon department. (Barrage balloons were an effective anti-aircraft measure in World War I and were widely embraced in World War II. The idea was that the cables holding the balloons created a hazard for aircraft engaged in low-level strafing or bombing.)

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    Neo Stryder  about 1 year ago

    Sorry Lucy, but all what I hear is a clogged trombone.

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    Decepticomic  about 1 year ago

    As long as she doesn’t try to make the country great again.

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    preacherman Premium Member about 1 year ago

    They also serve who only rivet and write.

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    ChristineMurphy  about 1 year ago

    My kid’s grandma joined the Navy when she was 20, stationed in Hawaii, during World War II. I make certain that they know it, and told my grandchildren who were old enough about it this year when they celebrated Veterans Day in school.

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    Is like a melody Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Yay Grandmas everywhere. They’re the ones who feed and watch over families.

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    SusieB  about 1 year ago

    Definitely something to be proud of Lucy. Now I am wondering if Grandma married one of those 17 serviceman pen pals

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    uniquename  about 1 year ago

    She may have written to my dad. Or my father-in-law.

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    mourdac Premium Member about 1 year ago

    My parents and all my aunts and uncles did their part as did many others. Don’t think there is that sense of duty and sacrifice today.

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    dflak  about 1 year ago

    My eldest aunt convinced my mom to work at the Military processing center. It was a way to meet hundreds of men a day!

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    WCraft Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Hip-hip-hoorah! (Sincerely agree!)

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    geese28  about 1 year ago

    Hmm wonder what she wrote to them about….

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    Lynnjav  about 1 year ago

    So many women stepped up and did all that they could during WWII. Let’s hear it for all of them!

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    jrankin1959  about 1 year ago

    Lucy? The country IS great – your grandmother worked to preserve it. Yay for your grandmother!

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    Count Olaf Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Dilly! Dilly! Appropriate strip in anticipation of this Friday and Saturday. Two of The❤️Count’s favorite holidays.

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    mindjob  about 1 year ago

    Let’s not forget she made a great apple pie

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    ladykat  about 1 year ago

    Hurray for Grandma!

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    Daltongang Premium Member about 1 year ago

    And her name was Rosie.

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    John Jorgensen  about 1 year ago

    Good for Lucy. It’s always interesting to hear people talk about their own ancestors’ roles in history.

    I had one who was a scout in Sherman’s army during the March to Sea. In late November he led a small detachment to raid a certain farm in order to confiscate forage for the army. He and his squadron were unaware that the farm was defended by Confederate soldiers and they were picked off at a distance by riflemen on the second floor of the farmhouse. My ancestor was hit in the, umm, posterior. He spent the rest of the war in a POW camp; thankfully that was only a few months, and it wasn’t Andersonville. Many years later Congress authorized a special pension bonus for veterans who’d been wounded under specific circumstances and he qualified. He had to provide, among other things, a photo of the scarred-over exit wound. So he hired a photographer to take a picture of his bare buttocks.

    He married a woman who was a distant cousin of Hermann Goering. At the time that meant nothing, of course, and I highly doubt either even knew the other existed. But after Pearl Harbor my grandmother and her brothers seem to have altered their genealogy to conceal the Gehring (in the anglicized spelling) connection. They invented an Irish Catholic ancestor in her place. This is interesting because on my mother’s side of the family most of my ancestors really are Irish Catholic immigrants who survived the Famine. In the 1840s the discrimination and persecution they faced were stomach-churning. In the 1940s that ethnic group was so respectably mainstream that others who wanted to avoid nasty experiences of nativism would impersonate them. I’m intrigued by what that says about the ever-shifting American identity.

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    anomalous4  about 1 year ago

    My grandma – just 5’ tall & maybe 95 lbs. in steel-toed work boots – was a civilian aircraft inspector & occasional truck driver on an Air Force base. She didn’t take any cr@p from anyone, & all the guys loved her because she could get into nooks & crannies no one else could, so they knew her inspections were extra-thorough!

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    eced52  about 1 year ago

    The boys look forward to your letters.

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    raybarb44  about 1 year ago

    Here here good lady. Well done, well done indeed…..

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    Save Linus  about 1 year ago

    Good job, Lucy’s grandmother! Too bad your granddaughter is so entitled…

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    MT Wallet   about 1 year ago

    Barney Google November 7.

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    eddi-TBH  about 1 year ago

    Three cheers for the ladies who proved yes, they can do it.

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    Taracinablue  about 1 year ago

    Wrote letters? I’m guessing that was a morale-boosting program. Hadn’t heard of that one.

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    Teto85 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    My grandmother was a WASP and taught me and all her grandkids, who wanted, how to fly. I have passed that down to my daughters. Their mum is quite content to be a passenger. Clear skies Gramma. Clear skies.

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    Saddenedby Premium Member almost 1 year ago

    Hear Hear!!

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