Abigail Van Buren Delights Journalists with Wit, Advice By KATHY COOK Emerald \\ omen’s Editor "I don’t think the kids are any worse than they’ve ever been; it’s the adults who are delinquent.” That was the capsule comment of popular columnist Abigail Van Buren. who appeared in person to answer the many questions of college and high school women's editors Monday in Portland. The chic Abby. in real life a 39-year-old San Mateo, Calif housewife. captivated her young audience with an assortment of opinions, anecdotes and witty re plies on a wide range of topics. ‘Kids the Same' Attired in a sleek black sheath Abby told her listeners that "kids stay the same. If we have any problems in the conducts of the youth, it's because the adults have relaxed their standards." Abby had quick and ready an swers for all inquirers. One high school girl asked this mother of high schoolers if her children's friends came to her for advice. . “Oh. yes." she answered. “But fifct of all they come over to get a look at me. I don't know if they think I’m a freak or something, but they always look first, then we sit down and talk." Family Avid Readers “My own family takes me about the least seriously of anyone— sometimes my kids come home from school wondering what ‘Abby’ had to say,” she said with a twinkle in her eye. “ ‘I guess I'll have to start reading your column. Mom','- her concerned son said one day, “ ‘all For a flattering face frame (white worn around the face is always flattering) choose a wide bib of chalky fresh water pearls. Use these to fill in your new standaway necklines. the kuis read it and talk about what Abby is saving and 1 never know what’s going on'.” Abby operates from her home with a large staff of secretaries and consultants. Receiving more than 7,000 letters a week, she re plies to each one. either by direct mail or in the 80 papers using , her syndicated column. Friends Consulted Among her consultants are a Jewish rabbi, a Catholic priest I and a Methodist minister. ”1 also rely on a large group of friends for advice.” she confided. "I have a friend who is a psychologist . and I'm always giving him a ! buzz.” "One of the things I have to decide when I read a letter is whether to cry on the writer's shoulder or to give him a kick in the pants,” remarked Abby. She added that “it doesn't do a person any good if you always 'cry along with him' on a prob lem.” “I tell them what I think,” I she asserted. Daily Tally Told Sketching her column's usual format, Abby told of her daily list: an oldster's plea, a teen-age letter, an “odd ball" and an'un ! faithful husband letter — along with a “confidential.” “X get at least a hundred letters a week from moon-struck teen age girls who claim they are madly in love with boys they see in the hall who don’t always speak first,” Abby recalled. " 'Should I say hi! first, or wait for him?' they wonder." Her stock reply was, “Of course you should speak first!” Marital Trouble ‘Popular’ Marital problems are her most frequent complaint, followed by teenage crises, such as “ 'my mother doesn't understand me'.” “Tm the baby in the group1” and ”'ail the kids do things I ; can't'," ranked high in Abby's "frequent” department. • I also get hundreds of letters from non-signers," Abby dis closed. She stai'ts these letters ; with such names as “To Betty Bank Clerk" or "Dear Harriet Hypochondriac." Her work doesn't interfere with ! her homemaking life, Abby in sisted. ”1 get up at tl. eat with ' my husband, then have a second ; breakfast with the children at j 7:45," she related. Work Km!-* at 8 ‘•At 8:30, my secretary arrives i and we work until noon. I have lunch on a tray and work until j 3. when the kids get home from | school. That's it, I’m through with I work!” Abby started her career by writing for the San Francisco Chronicle. Two weeks after she began her column, she was syndi I cated. "The New York Daily Mirror saw my column and then | everybody wanted it,” she ex ! claimed. “'Dear Abby” appeared just six 1 weeks after Ann Landers, Miss Van Buren’s sister in real life, started her similar column in Chicago. ‘Still Friends’ ”Yes. we’re still friends," Abby chuckled. “The only competition we have js from our syndicates— they don’t like the idea that we’re sisters!” Abby told her listeners that "I get my real satisfaction from helping people; I’m like that.” Heel lifts now come in a non clicking. nerve calming plastic that is largely nylon. These nylon "new'-heels" also boast the long wearing qualities of nylon. "If I weren't writing my column, IM be working for the polio foun dation or training grey ladies,'' she said. Psychiatry Is listed among Afcby’s writing aids to "be able to give the best advice I can." Sincerely Itewanllog "The thing that really makes my work worthwhile," Abby re flected, “is when I get a letter from a reader who sincerely wants advice, like the one from a 17-year-old Palo Alto boy." The boy, in trouble with a 19 yonr-old-glrl, ho lit ii stamped, self-addressed envelope lor my reply. she explained. "A couple of day* later, hU father railed mo and thanked n •• personally for the help I'd given his son. Ho said if there was ever anything ho could do to help me. Just to say the word," she re ported. "Letters like thin one make the Job gratifying." Abby concluded, as ahe whirled away to another In a series of speaking appear ances in the Portland area. IIEIIK AKE TWO Spring-Summer rrcatlonn by the Kmtllo Schu berth Fashion House of Koine. Ia*ft in :i rin'kluil dress of whit** chenille printed with flower banket motif* with a undergown of violet faille. Hat Is* of violet faille with a flower decoration. 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