A16 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Tuesday, April 27, 2021 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Connecting with teens will impact new relationship FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE Dear Abby: After I ended a It’s funny. Although I can’t 20-year marriage, I took some time remember her name, there’s no one off from relationships and am now from my past that I have thought back in the dating world. My ex-hus- about more than her. I would give band and I never had children. anything to find her and apologize. I recently met a man with two It haunts me. Any suggestions? — teenagers. He says I am “detached” Biggest Regret in the South from children. I am not detached! I Dear Biggest Regret: What you Jeanne just never had experience with them. did to that girl was brutal. Because Phillips How do I proceed with this relation- it’s not possible for you to directly ADVICE ship since his kids are very dear to offer the apology she deserves, him? — Not Detached concentrate harder on the present and always try to treat everyone with Dear Not Detached: This man’s offspring are no longer “children.” They are kindness and sensitivity. teenagers, and teens can be complicated. Dear Abby: I’d like advice on how to Reach out to them the way you would anyone handle a problem that crops up every time of any age. Be friendly and show them you are family members invite me out to a dinner they interested in them. If they have a mother in are paying for. the picture, do not try to “mother” them. See I know the rule of etiquette is to order an if you share any common interests (sports, item that’s the same or less than what the host music, fashion, etc.), resist the urge to lecture is ordering, but I am often asked to order first. This means I have no idea what the payer’s them, and be a good listener. Dear Abby: Back around 1987, a girl meal will cost. If it means ordering something asked me to take her to her high school prom. on the menu other than what I’d rather have I was several years older, didn’t know her — a burger instead of a steak — in that case, well and wanted to say no but couldn’t. In the should I offer to pay for my own meal? What if they won’t hear of taking any money from me? end I stood her up. I don’t even remember her Can I still order the steak since my offer to pay name. She worked at a grocery store with my was refused? — Likes To Follow The Rules brother. That was more than 30 years ago. I am Dear Likes: A way to get around order- married now and have two fine children. I ing first might be to say, “I haven’t decided was recently asked what my biggest regret yet. I’d like to hear what the others are order- is, and I said standing her up. Not one week ing.” However, if you would be uncomfortable has gone by in the last 30 years that I haven’t doing that, and your hosts won’t let you have a thought about her and wished I could find her separate check, be a gracious guest and enjoy and tell her how truly sorry I am. every bite of your steak dinner. DAYS GONE BY From the East Oregonian BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS 100 Years Ago April 27, 1921 A dramatic feature of the G.A.R. conven- tion to be held here in June is that it will be the last time the Grand Army men will ever assemble in Pendleton and quite likely they will never meet again in Eastern Oregon. The ranks of the G.A.R. grow thinner each year and as even the youngest of the veterans are in the seventies the hand of time will fall heav- ily upon them during the next decade. The G.A.R. last met here 27 years ago and at that time the organization was in its prime. This time they request that their parade be short and that programs in their honor be closed at 9 p.m. or thereabouts. 50 Years Ago April 27, 1971 Richard Schulberg, son of John A. Schul- berg of Pendleton, has been accepted as a graduate student in the Russian and East European Institute at Yale University. Schulgerg is a senior in Portland State Univer- sity’s Zagreb Institute in Yugoslavia. A polit- ical science major, Schulberg qualifies for a $2,900 tuition grant as well as an $1,800 long term loan, both of which are renewable every year contingent upon his progress toward a degree. 25 Years Ago April 27, 1996 When Addison Schulberg came home from Portland six weeks ago, he was sport- ing a blue spot Band-Aid on his hand and a big scar on his chest. The resilient 4-year- old with flashing brown eyes shook his head gently and said he couldn’t ride his bike at the track because his scar “could break open.” Nine hours of surgery on his heart and a week at Emanuel Hospital gave the preco- cious preschooler a lot to talk about. Addison had two defective valves in his heart. He likes to have his mom, Carol Hanks, and dad, Ken Schulberg, read a book to him about a little boy’s heart surgery. “Every time he reads it, he has more questions,” Carol said. BY DEAN YOUNG AND STAN DRAKE 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 27, 1978, 51 construction workers plunged to their deaths when a scaffold inside a cooling tower at the Pleasants Power Station site in West Virginia fell 168 feet to the ground. In 1521, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magel- lan was killed by natives in the Philippines. In 1791, the inventor of the telegraph, Samuel Morse, was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts. In 1810, Ludwig van Beethoven wrote one of his most famous piano composi- tions, the Bagatelle in A-mi- nor. In 1822, the 18th president of the United States, Ulysses S. Grant, was born in Point Pleasant, Ohio. In 1865, the steamer Sultana, carrying freed Union prisoners of war, exploded on the Mississippi River near Memphis, Tennes- see; death toll estimates vary from 1,500 to 2,000. In 1941, German forces occupied Athens during World War II. In 1973, acting FBI Direc- tor L. Patrick Gray resigned after it was revealed that he’d destroyed files removed from the safe of Watergate conspir- ator E. Howard Hunt. In 1982, the trial of John W. Hinckley Jr., who shot four people, including Presi- dent Ronald Reagan, began in Washington. (The trial ended with Hinckley’s acquittal by reason of insanity.) In 1994, former Presi- dent Richard M. Nixon was remembered at an outdoor funeral service attended by all five of his successors at the Nixon presidential library in Yorba Linda, California. In 2009, a 23-month-old Mexico City toddler died at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, becoming the first swine-flu death on U.S. soil. In 2010, former Pana- manian dictator Manuel Noriega was extradited from the United States to France, where he was later convicted of laundering drug money and received a seven-year sentence. In 2015, rioters plunged part of Baltimore into chaos, torching a pharmacy, setting police cars ablaze and throw- ing bricks at officers hours after thousands attended a funeral for Freddie Gray, a Black man who died from a severe spinal injury he’d suffered in police custody; the Baltimore Orioles’ home game against the Chicago White Sox was postponed because of safety concerns. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Anouk Aimee is 89. Rock singer Kate Pierson (The B-52′s) is 73. Pop singer Sheena Easton is 62. Actor James Le Gros is 59. Rock musician Rob Squires (Big Head Todd and the Monsters) is 56. Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., is 52. Actor Francis Capra is 38. Actor Ari Gray- nor is 38. Rock singer-musi- cian Patrick Stump (Fall Out Boy) is 37. Actor Sheila Vand is 36. Actor Jenna Coleman is 35. Actor William Moseley is 34. Singer Lizzo is 33. Actor Emily Rios is 32. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE