Most Americans don"t like to get advice from members of their family. When they need advice, they don"t usually
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people they know.
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, many Americans write letters to newspapers and magazines which give advice
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many different subjects, including family problem, sex, the use
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the language, health, cooking, childcare, clothes, and how to buy a house or a ear.
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newspapers regularly print letters
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readers with problems. Along
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the letters there are answers written
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people who are supposed to know how to
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such problems. Some of these writers are doctors;
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are lawyers or educators. But two of the most famous writers of advice
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women without special training
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this kind of work. One of them answers letters
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to "Dear Abby". The other is addressed
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"Dear Ann Landers". Experience is their preparation for
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advice.
There is one writer who has not lived long
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to have much experience. She is a girl named Angel Cavaliere, who started writing
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for newspaper readers
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the age of ten. Her advice to young readers now
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regularly in the Philadelphia Bulletin in a column
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DEAR ANGEL.