A12 East Oregonian PEANUTS COFFEE BREAK Thursday, April 29, 2021 DEAR ABBY BY CHARLES M . SCHULZ Receptionist hears doctor and staff ridicule patients FOR BETTER OR WORSE BY LYNN JOHNSTON B.C. BY JOHNNY HART PICKLES BY BRIAN CRANE Dear Abby: I work as a recep- reason, we no longer allow friends tionist in a small medical office. I into our children’s rooms. love my job, but I cannot tolerate Recently, another item went when my co-workers make fun of missing, and my daughter spotted our patients. Sometimes it happens it at Wendy’s house. I told her she while the patients are still in the should say something and take it exam rooms, maybe within earshot. back, but she is shy. I want to say Even the doctor contributes to this something to the parents, but I’m Jeanne crudeness. afraid it will ruin our friendship. I Phillips Some examples: “Did you see the don’t think the mother knows her ADVICE size of that guy’s nose?” or, “What’s daughter does these things. Any with the color of her hair?” or, “He ideas? — Sticky Fingers smells like he hasn’t had a bath in Dear Sticky Fingers: If the shoe weeks.” This goes on throughout the day was on the other foot and your daughter was every day. Is there anything I can do or say to stealing things from her friends’ homes, change this mindset? We have great patients. wouldn’t you want to know what was going — At A Loss For Words on so you could deal with it? Talk to Wendy’s Dear At A Loss: The person who’s mother! Tell her you don’t want to spoil a friendship you treasure, but Wendy has a responsible for the lack of respect for the patients is your employer, the doctor. If this problem she needs to know about. If you is happening sometimes within earshot of the ignore it, the problem will only escalate. patients, I am, frankly, shocked that he or she Dear Abby: Would you please settle an has a medical practice. argument between my husband and me? There is nothing you can do to change One of us thinks it’s OK to dry our every- the culture in that environment. Because it day dishes with the same dish towel we clean upsets you — and I can certainly see why it our dog’s bowl with. The bowl is first rinsed with soap and water then wiped with the dish would — you might be happier working for towel. One of us thinks it’s disgusting. The another doctor. Dear Abby: My daughter “Tiffany” is other disagrees. Would you wash your dishes 12. Her best friend, “Wendy,” lives down the with said towel? — Curious in Kettering, block. We are good friends with her parents. Ohio How do I put this: Wendy is a thief. She Dear Curious: Although the dish may has no impulse control. When she comes be perfectly clean after being washed with over, she helps herself to whatever is lying soap and water, because of the “ick” factor, around, mostly candy and trinkets. For this I sure wouldn’t. DAYS GONE BY From the East Oregonian BEETLE BAILEY GARFIELD BLONDIE BY MORT WALKER BY JIM DAVIS 100 Years Ago April 29, 1921 Mrs. Eula Ingles, a native of Pendleton, is held in the city jail in Astoria and may face a murder charge as the result of the shooting last night in a local rooming house. A.J. Burns, her victim, is lying in the hospital in a criti- cal condition, the bullet having perforated his intestines. He is not expected to live. The two had been living together for several years as man and wife, the woman says, and came to Astoria a month ago. The shooting was the result of a moonshine party during which Burns is said to have beaten the woman. Mrs. Ingles says her maiden name was Eula Cox and that she was born in Pendleton in 1891, and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Cox, and left that city after finishing the grade school. 50 Years Ago April 29, 1971 When an era of railroading ends here Friday with the last runs of passenger trains through Pendleton, three jobs go with it. Three Union Pacific telegraphers will be transferred to other jobs within the UP system. The door to the Pendleton passenger depot will be locked. Not that it will make much difference. Except for the last couple of weeks, the depot for years has been about as empty at midday as at midnight. “But it’s a shame,” said Vern Bryant, car desk clerk at the Pendleton depot. He’s worked here 30 years. “You’d think that at least one passenger train could have been left on the line.” 25 Years Ago April 29, 1996 The Crook County Cowgirls never got word that there softball doubleheader agains the Bucks Saturday was moved up an hour to accommodate Pendleton’s prom. Conse- quently, the cowgirls were an hour late. After what the Bucks did to them, though, the Cowgirls will probably never be late again, especially on such an important date Pendle- ton crushed the tardy Cowgirls 24-1 and 13-0 to move to 5-1 in the Intermountain Confer- ence standings, just a game back in the loss column to La Grande. On Saturday, just about every Buck who might have been in a slump got out of one. 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 29, 1992, a jury in Simi Valley, California, acquitted four Los Angeles police officers of almost all state charges in the video- taped beating of motorist Rodney King; the verdicts were followed by rioting in Los Angeles resulting in 55 deaths. In 1913, Swedish-born engineer Gideon Sundback of Hoboken, New Jersey, received a U.S. patent for a “separable fastener” — later known as the zipper. In 1945, during World War II, American soldiers liberated the Dachau concen- tration camp. Adolf Hitler married Eva Braun inside his “Fuhrerbunker” and desig- nated Adm. Karl Doenitz president. In 1946, 28 former Japa- nese officials went on trial in Tokyo as war crimi- nals; seven ended up being sentenced to death. In 1957, the SM-1, the first military nuclear power plant, was dedicated at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. In 1967, Aretha Frank- lin’s cover of Otis Redding’s “Respect” was released as a single by Atlantic Records. In 1961, “ABC’s Wide World of Sports” premiered, with Jim McKay as host. In 1983, Harold Washing- ton was sworn in as the first Black mayor of Chicago. In 1991, a cyclone began striking the South Asian country of Bangladesh; it ended up killing more than 138,000 people, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis- tration. In 1997, Staff Sgt. Delmar Simpson, a drill instructor at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, was convicted of raping six female train- ees (he was sentenced to 25 years in prison and dishon- orably discharged). A world- wide treaty to ban chemical weapons went into effect. In 2000, tens of thousands of angry Cuban-Americans marched peacefully through Miami’s Little Havana, protesting the raid in which armed federal agents yanked 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez from the home of relatives. In 2008, Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama denounced his former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, for what he termed “divisive and destructive” remarks on race. In 2010, the U.S. Navy officially ended a ban on women serving on subma- rines, saying the first women would be reporting for duty by 2012. The NCAA’s Board of Directors approved a 68-team format for the men’s basketball tournament begin- ning the next season. Today’s Bir thdays: Conductor Zubin Mehta is 85. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., is 71. Comedian Jerry Seinfeld is 67. Actor Daniel Day-Lewis is 64. Actor Michelle Pfeiffer is 63. Singer Carnie Wilson (Wilson Phillips) is 53. Actor Uma Thurman is 51. Rapper Master P is 51. Rock musi- cian Mike Hogan (The Cran- berries) is 48. PHOEBE AND HER UNICORN BY DANA SIMPSON BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PEIRCE