Dear Miss Manners: I work in a fast-food restaurant, in which we only go by our first names.
Often, when customers decide that I am the cause of whatever is not going their way, they ask me for my name. My first name ...
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to whether fast-food customers have a right to a ...
From your letter’s calm tone, Miss Manners likes to think that it is the complainant who is being unreasonable. But she ...
I don’t feel that it is any of their business. I just politely tell them that I don’t give out my last name. Often, they take ...
GENTLE READER: As the recipient of Gentle Readers’ mail, Miss Manners is all too aware of the deluge of rudeness in the modern world. But the transgressions of waitstaff — who live in hope of generous ...
I work in a fast-food restaurant, in which we only go by our first names. Often, when customers decide that I am the cause of whatever is not going their way, they ask me for my name. My first name is ...
GENTLE READER: As the recipient of Gentle Readers’ mail, Miss Manners is all too aware of the deluge of rudeness in the ...
I work in a fast-food restaurant, in which we only go by our first names. Often, when customers decide that I am the cause of whatever is not going their way, they ask me for my name. My first name is ...
I enjoy traveling and dining by myself. But I get offered the bad tables and hear the same pitiful comments in every restaurant.
Caged in a cell, Jerad Traylor struggled to breathe and cried out for help, pleading that he felt like he was dying. And it turned out his feelings of despair were exactly right. Four days after his ...