A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS FOR BETTER OR WORSE COFFEE BREAK BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE BEETLE BAILEY BY MORT WALKER Tuesday, April 13, 2021 DEAR ABBY Man’s tattoos draw fire from disapproving wife Dear Abby: My tattoos are feelings about it, it came across to her destroying my marriage, and I just as disrespectful of her feelings. As don’t understand why. I’m a 56-year- you have acquired more and more, old elementary art teacher and the it may have felt to her like one insult father of three grown children. Since piled on another. I was young, I have loved the artistic Having never spoken with your expression of tattoos, and I always wife, I can’t guess her reason for envisioned having them, lots of them. talking about leaving you, but it’s Jeanne It had been about 10 years since important you ask why those roses Phillips my last one, but I decided to get were the last straw. (Am I correct in ADVICE another one. Telling my wife about assuming there’s no place else on wanting another one was awful. My your “canvas” that hasn’t been illus- wife of 28 years hates tattoos. We trated?) have terrible arguments every time I get one. Dear Abby: My husband and I have been I have covered my entire upper body. (Other married 20-plus years. His mother has never than my hands, none of them are visible while liked me. I have never done anything to her I’m wearing my work clothes.) I love them. or her husband. I just returned home with roses tattooed My father-in-law passed away two years on my hands, and my wife is ready to leave back, and my mother-in-law is older. If some- me. She says I have gone too far with all my thing happens to her, how am I supposed ink. I’m a responsible and respectful person. to react? I know I have to be there for my I don’t drink, smoke, gamble or have any husband. My husband and I get along wonder- destructive vices. I’m highly regarded as a fully, but at the same time, I would feel like a leader and role model at my school. hypocrite if I went to her funeral. We haven’t Friends, colleagues — even strangers — spoken in over a year. compliment me on my tattoos. However, you Other family members have repeated would think my tattoos and I are the devil things she has said about me as well as my in my wife’s eyes. Am I the problem, or is family. I put up with her behavior for years. I her perception of tattoos the issue? Please, only quit talking to her or going around her a any advice would be greatly accepted. I can’t year ago. — Hates Hypocrisy in Michigan Dear Hates: Funerals are for the living. understand her stance on this. — Art in Las Do not succumb to the temptation to use your Vegas Dear Art: It is your body, and you have the mother-in-law’s as a platform to demonstrate right to do what you want with it. While not your dislike of her. Attend the funeral and everyone is a fan of body art, I assume that you comfort your husband, who likely will be had tattoos before you and your wife married. hurting and need your support. And when you It is possible that over the years, when you told do, above all, refrain from humming, “Ding, your wife you were getting more, knowing her Dong, the Witch is Dead.” DAYS GONE BY From the East Oregonian GARFIELD BLONDIE BY JIM DAVIS BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 100 Years Ago April 13, 1921 That a trainload of farmers from the Middle West may be expected to pay Oregon a visit during July with the intention of buying land and settling is the information carried in a letter that has been received at the office of the Commercial Association from the secretary of the Oregon State Chamber of Commerce. An interesting itinerary is being arranged for the visitors, and the Pendleton organization has been asked to assist in the work. Owing to the diversity of interests that Umatilla county has to offer for farmers in the way of wheat land, fruit land and irrigated land, an effort will be made to secure a share of the immigrants for this county. 50 Years Ago April 13, 1971 A boarding home request will be consid- ered again when the Pendleton Planning Commission meets in the council chambers at 4 p.m. Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jones operate the boarding home at 704 S. Main St., for former patients of Eastern Oregon Hospital and Training Center. They applied earlier for permission to increase the number of boarders at the halfway house from six to 11. A petition opposing the location of the halfway house was presented at last Tuesday’s Pendleton City Council meeting. Fear was expressed that residents of the house might harm children. 25 Years Ago April 13, 1996 Third grader Jessica Royal knows the President of the United States is a busy man. But that didn’t stop the 9-year-old Lincoln Elementary School student from penning Bill Clinton a letter and sending it to his White House address. “I told him I wanted to become President,” said Royal. “I asked him to write back and give me some tips.” The next thing you know Royal found herself toting to school a personal, decidedly pres- idential, reply. Royal’s third grade teacher, Andrea Anderson, had hear Royal say she was writing Clinton a letter. Still, it surprised her when she showed up for class with a personal reply for a Thursday morning show-and-tell session. “She stood and read the whole thing,” Anderson said. TODAY IN HISTORY DILBERT THE WIZARD OF ID LUANN ZITS BY SCOTT ADAMS BY BRANT PARKER AND JOHNNY HART BY GREG EVANS BY JERRY SCOTT AND JIM BORGMAN On April 13, 1970, Apollo 13, four-fifths of the way to the moon, was crip- pled when a tank containing liquid oxygen burst. (The astronauts managed to return safely.) In 1743, the third pres- ident of the United States, Thomas Jefferson, was born in Shadwell in the Virginia Colony. In 1861, at the start of the Civil War, Fort Sumter in South Carolina fell to Confederate forces. In 1870, the Metropolitan Museum of Art was incor- porated in New York. (The original museum opened in 1872.) In 1964, Sidney Poitier became the first Black performer in a leading role to win an Academy Award for his performance in “Lilies of the Field.” In 1992, the Great Chicago Flood took place as the city’s century-old tunnel system and adjacent base- ments filled with water from the Chicago River. “The Bridges of Madison County,” a romance novel by Robert James Waller, was published by Warner Books. In 1997, Tiger Woods became the youngest person to win the Masters Tourna- ment and the first player of partly African heritage to claim a major golf title. In 1999, right-to-die advocate Dr. Jack Kevorkian was sentenced in Pontiac, Michigan, to 10 to 25 years in prison for second-degree murder in the lethal injection of a Lou Gehrig’s disease patient. (Kevorkian ended up serving eight years.) In 2005, a defiant Eric Rudolph pleaded guilty to carrying out the deadly bombing at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and three other attacks in back-to-back court appearances in Birmingham, Alabama, and Atlanta. In 2015, a federal judge in Washington sentenced former Blackwater security guard Nicholas Slatten to life in prison and three others to 30-year terms for their roles in a 2007 shooting in Bagh- dad’s Nisoor Square that killed 14 Iraqi civilians and wounded 17 others. Today’s Bir thdays: Singer Al Green is 75. Actor Ron Perlman is 71. Band- leader/rock musician Max Weinberg is 70. Actor Saun- dra Santiago is 64. Actor Page Hannah is 57. Reggae singer Capleton is 54. Singer Lou Bega is 46. Actor-producer Glenn Howerton is 45. Actor Kyle Howard is 43. Actor Kelli Giddish is 41. Actor Courtney Peldon is 40. Pop singer Nellie McKay is 39. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE