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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (June 23, 2017)
Page 6B East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Friday, June 23, 2017 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Serial father keeps chummy relationships with his exes FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE as this young man appears to be. Dear Abby: I recently met a Dear Abby: I recently attended a 28-year-old father of three I’m interested in. He seems wonderful. wedding after which the bride chose He’s a hard worker, takes care of his not to adopt her husband’s last name. responsibilities and is an amazing After the wedding we met them for father to his children. They’re all still dinner. When they strolled up to very little, but they’re great kids. the restaurant to meet us, I happily The only thing that’s been on my exclaimed, “Oh, here come Mr. mind lately is he has a lot of baggage. and Mrs. Smith!” after which I was Jeanne Those kids are from three different Phillips quickly informed that I was wrong women. He gets along with all of because the bride was keeping her Advice them very well, to the point that they maiden name. sometimes do stuff together with the Abby, even if a woman goes by children. They go out to places, or sometimes her maiden name, is it so wrong to refer to he invites them over to his place to swim in her as “the Mrs.”? — Stepped In It the pool. Dear Stepped: Your mistake was an I understand that he has to maintain a innocent one. Now that you know this couple healthy relationship with his exes for the sake is sensitive about their individual identities, of the children, but I never thought it would address them by their names (“Linda” and be this “healthy.” I have never experienced “Robert”) if you wish to maintain a social something like this. I appreciate him being relationship. upfront about everything, but I can’t stop Dear Abby: You and your mother have thinking about it. Am I overreacting? — answered many sexual questions in your Three’s Company column over the years. Editors back in the Dear Three’s Company: I don’t think so. ’50s were more prudish about what could be While I admire the man’s devotion to his chil- published in family papers. Did your mother dren — not to mention his skilled diplomatic have to battle with dragons to print sexual ability — it does appear that he has a problem questions from her readers? — Sonny In making a lasting commitment to a woman. Alabama Unless you would seriously consider joining Dear Sonny: If she did, she didn’t mention this “harem,” I urge you to religiously prac- it to me. While I agree that editors back then tice contraception. If you would like children — and even now — tend to be conservative, in the future, it would be better to approach it if they disapprove of a letter, they are free not with someone who isn’t as marriage-phobic to print it. DAYS GONE BY BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS 100 Years Ago From the East Oregonian June 23, 1917 That Edward Terney of the Oregon Motor Garage knows how to war dance is testified to by fellow workers who yesterday saw him performing after a bucket of burning gasoline had been thrown upon him by accident. The gas was set afire by a short circuit in an old car. An employee grasped the bucket and rushed to the back alley with the same. In trying to throw the burning stuff upon the ground some of it went on Terney instead with the result his life might have been endangered had it not been for the quick work of Oliver Leslie who rolled Terney in the dirt, thus extinguishing the blaze. Turney was unhurt and suffered no damage save a small hole burned in his trousers. 50 Years Ago From the East Oregonian June 23, 1967 A union member who crossed the picket line at Kerns Co. in Pilot Rock two weeks ago to return to work was charged Wednesday with assault. Don Williams, Pendleton, is accused of striking Harley Wagoner, Pilot Rock. Witnesses said Williams stopped his car as he crossed the picket line Tuesday, got out, and hit Wagoner three times, twice in the head and once in the stomach. Roland Faircloth, president of Local 3-8 of the International Woodworkers of America, said a doctor declared Wagoner suffered a slight concussion from the blows. Union officials said Wagoner had been calling Williams a “scab.” 25 Years Ago From the East Oregonian June 23, 1992 Randy Melton of Pendleton is a year away from high school graduation, but he already feels at home on the Whitman College campus. Melton, 16, spent the past two summers as a student at the Whitman Insti- tute for Scholastic Enrichment program. This year he was invited back to Walla Walla as a counselor in a program aimed at encouraging minority students to attend college. Before the program, “I hadn’t ever heard of Whitman College and I didn’t think about college,” Melton said. THIS DAY IN HISTORY BLONDIE DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN Today is Friday, June 23, the 174th day of 2017. There are 191 days left in the year. Today’s Highlights in History: On June 23, 1967, Pres- ident Lyndon B. Johnson, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin (ah-LEK’-say koh-SEE’-gihn) and their advisers opened a three-day summit at Glassboro State College in New Jersey. The U.S. Senate voted 92-5 to censure Democrat Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut for diverting campaign money to his personal use. On this date: In 1314, during the First War of Scottish Indepen- dence, the two-day Battle of Bannockburn, resulting in victory for the forces of Robert the Bruce over the army of King Edward II, began near Stirling. In 1537, Spanish explorer Pedro de Mendoza, the founder of Buenos Aires, died aboard his ship while heading back to Spain. In 1757, forces of the East India Company led by Robert Clive won the Battle of Plassey, which effectively marked the beginning of British colonial rule in India. In 1892, the Democratic national convention in Chicago nominated former President Grover Cleveland on the first ballot. In 1904, President Theo- dore Roosevelt was nominated for a second term of office at the Republican national convention in Chicago. In 1931, aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from New York on a round-the-world flight that lasted eight days and 15 hours. In 1947, the Senate joined the House in overriding President Harry S. Truman’s veto of the Taft-Hartley Act, designed to limit the power of organized labor. In 1950, Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 2501, a DC-4, crashed into Lake Michigan with the loss of all 58 people on board. In 1972, President Richard Nixon and White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman discussed using the CIA to obstruct the FBI’s Watergate investigation. (Revelation of the tape recording of this conversation sparked Nixon’s resignation in 1974.) Presi- dent Nixon signed Title IX barring discrimination on the basis of sex for “any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.” Today’s Birthdays: Singer Diana Trask is 77. Musical conductor James Levine is 74. Actor Ted Shackelford is 71. Actor Bryan Brown is 70. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is 69. Actor Jim Metzler is 66. “American Idol” ex-judge Randy Jackson is 61. Actress Frances McDormand is 60. Rock musician Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth) is 55. Actor Paul La Greca is 55. Writ- er-director Joss Whedon is 53. Rhythm-and-blues singer Chico DeBarge is 47. Actress Selma Blair is 45. Actor Joel Edgerton (“Loving”) is 43. Rock singer KT Tunstall is 42. Rhythm-and-blues singer Virgo Williams (Ghostowns DJs) is 42. Actress Emman- uelle Vaugier is 41. Sing- er-songwriter Jason Mraz is 40. Football Hall of Fame electee LaDainian Tomlinson is 38. Actress Melissa Rauch is 37. Church singer Anna Wattenburger is 6. Thought for Today: “Suffering without under- standing in this life is a heap worse than suffering when you have at least the grain of an idea what it’s all for.” — Mary Ellen Chase, American author (1887-1973). PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE