Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 September 1974 — Page 4
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Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana
Wednesday, September 25, 1974
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By VITIAN BROWN AP Newsfeatures Writer Few women use one brand of cosmetics, so why do most makeup experts confine their clients to one line, asks pretty Tokho-bom Reiko Lyster of Chicago, a former model. Out of that thought was born a new approach, she says, when she founded her International Beauty Institute a year ago. Women are educated t'
use me cosmetics they want to use and they are helped to select new ones, but she doesn’t sell anything. In the ’60s she had been associated with a number of cosmetics companies in Japan, and she had represented one in several television series, but now, free of the industry, she can provide the new service, she remarked. Her students like the idea.
Cosmetics Expert Tells How
“Women like to mix lotions,
creams and makeup and they like to try new things,” she explained. “At the Institute they can try products of all major companies as they participate in a beauty program.” The Chicago endeavor has been so successful she is thinking of branching out in other areas,
beginning in New York. A two-hour or nine-hour
makeup plan includes skin and
nail care, cosmetics application, fragrance selection, posture, diet, wardrote and a hair styling session with a local hairdresser. She also has a training program for young people who want to become cosmetics representatives in which they learn inventory management and the details of running a small business. At 40, Mrs. Lyster has the pe-
tite Oriental good looks that make her look far younger than her years even though she wears a white streak in her
dark hair.
“If age can be a plus-factor and you are open to ideas, you can be an interesting person as long as you live,” she remarked. “It is too bad the United States is so youth oriented. In Japan older women are respected for their wisdom and
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experience.’ It is one reason she enjoyed giving a demonstration for older women last year. In their 80s and 90s, they were interested in everything. She is especially concerned with teen-agers — her own daughter, Barbara, is 14 — because they begin using cosmetics without any regard for its effect on their skin. Nearly all use blusher, but they fail to apply a moisturizer first to protect the skin. And they do not always remove makeup at night. Yet “It is an easy time to clog the pores that can lead to all sorts of skin problems later.” As for the 25-year-old woman, it is an age when she becomes more aware of what makeup can do for her, “but they waste dollars,” she insists. “Their eyelashes are likely to look too thick, too dark, and too long, and to look false. If anyone can say ‘aren’t those nice lashes,’ the falseness can be detected, one reason I am against eyelashes that look false. They should be trimmed to look natu-
ral.”
That age group also omits face powder which she thinks they need. The softness is more flattering than the shine they wore as teen-agers, she says. Many women in their 40s give up. saying “how can I ever improve myself,” but they should give themselves a chance, taking more time out for skin care and finding makeup that will enhance their individualism. “It takes work to look good after 40, but one shouldn’t think it is wasted and take the attitude, ‘who will look at me, anyway.’ Somebody will, if you look good. And a husband and children appreciate a wife and mother who looks with it,” she
tells her students. At the other extreme, she says, are the 40s who want to look 25. A mistake, she says. Better to create a look that most younger girls do not have — a look that says you are aware of what is happening in fashion and beauty. For older women and those who need a hurry-up makeup, a lot can be accomplished with color. Blusher at the cheek bones and carried to the hairline can give a sparkle to the eyes. A bit of color at the eye and a lipstick that catches the color of a dress can complete the picture. Mrs. Lyster was brought up by strict parents, but at 22, wanting to meet people, she became a fashion model, a new idea in Japan at that time, she explained. She also had a bit part in a movie. She had learned English in junior college and later became an interpreter for Marlon Brando when he made "Teahouse of the August Moon” in Japan. They became good friends and, in a way, he may have
SEIKO LYSTER contributed to her beauty ambitions, she says. She learned to speak slowly and more softly by observing him, she says, and he showed her how to give foot massages (in daylight, she adds), telling her the secret of happy feet is in the pressure one exerts in massaging them.
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By Abigail Van Buren c 1974 by The Chicago Tribune
DEAR ABBY: In your reply to “Scared," who was dating a young man who had been arrested for indecent exposure, you recommended that if the man claimed to have had therapy, she should ask to talk to his therapist. As a practicing therapist, I must take exception to that advice. If I were confronted with such a request, I would have to explain that to do so would be violating professional ethics. I know of one psychiatrist who was successfully sued for divulging information under similar circumstances. This is as it should be, since the therapist is the agent of the patient, not of others. "Scared" should obtain information about exhibitionism in general from a professional in the mental health field (not from her boyfriend's therapist, if he has one). NEW YORK PSYCHIATRIST DEAR PSYCHIATRIST: I did not suggest that the young woman should attempt to get privileged information from her boyfriend's therapist without the boyfriend’s consent. It would seem that if the boyfriend had indeed had treatment and the girl was in no danger by contlni' ,T1 g to go with him, he would be eager for her to talk to his therapist for reassurance. If a patient asked you to talk to his girl friend, would you then refuse to see her? DEAR ABBY: This is in reference to the family who, when relaxing outdoors at a barbecue, or just sitting and visiting, were always “joined by a neighljor, who stayed until they went inside, even when they were entertaining guests. You advised the writer to either suffer the intruders presence, or tell her that you'd like a little privacy. May I add another solution? Why not build a six-foot fence? AL CENTENO, HOUSTON, TEXAS DEAR AL: That's a pretty sneaky way to get a plug in for the fence business, but it's a good idea for those who can afford it. How about a moat stocked with crocodiles? DEAR ABBY: I have had it! All summer long we ran a free hotel for my husband s relatives. U* s lister and her husband came for six weeks. His brother and his wife came for two weeks. (The brother used my car, so I had to take taxis the whole time!) Others took turns. We had company from June 1st until after Labor Day. No one offered to give me a lift with the work, and my grocery bills were like, forget it. Nobody even picked up the tab when we ate out. (We are supposed to be “the poor relatives" compared to them.) I've put up with this for three summers, and I'm sick of it. How can I keep this from happening next summer short of divorcing mv husband? He’s a soft touch. HAD IT IN WISCONSIN DEAR HAD IT: They’re your husband’s relatives. HE should tell them what the ground rules shall be for future visits. If he refuses, then YOU tell them. And if you don’t, you can expect a re-run of the last three summers and every summer henceforth. And if it happens, don’t complain. You're both a couple of soft touches. Everyone has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply, Write to ABBY: Box No. 69700, L.A., Calif. 90069. Enclose stampled-self-addressed envelope, please. Hate to write letters? Send SI to Abigail Van Buren, 132 Lasky Dr., Beverly Hills. Calif. 90212, for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.”
WEST A J 7 4 V K 6 5 3 ♦ J 10 9 7 4 A 8
EAST AQ 9 3 2 ¥ J 10 9 2 ♦ 6 5 AA J 4
SOUTH A A 8 5 ¥ A Q ♦ K 8 2 A K 10 9 7 3
The bidding .
East Pass
South 1 NT
West Pass
Opening lead diamonds.
North 3 NT
jack of
Assume you’re in three notrump and West leads a diamond. How should you play the hand? The actual declarer won the diamond with the king and played a low club to the queen. East took the ace and returned the jack of hearts. South finessed the queen, losing to the king, and back came a heart, dislodging the ace. Declarer led a diamond to the queen, returned a club, East following low, and was nowfaced with the excruciating choice between playing the king or the ten. Unfortunately, he guessed wrong by going up with the king and went down one, losing two clubs and three hearts, all told. It is hard to blame South for the misguess in clubs, as he could just as easily have been right by playing the king as the ten. He did not have the advantage of seeing the East-West cards. Nevertheless, the fact is that South misplayed the hand. He had a 100 per cent shot at the contract—and did not avail himself of it. He should have won the opening diamond lead in dummy, played a low club, and finessed the nine. He would then have been on firm ground, whatever the distribution. If the worst happened and the nine lost to the jack, the contract would still have been unassailable. Whatever West returned, South could force out the ace of clubs and so assure nine tricks consisting of three clubs, three diamonds, a heart and two spades. The contract was certain from the start—regardless of how the dubs or any other suit was divided. All South had to do was recognize that he could afford two club losers— provided he lost the first one to West, who could do him no harm with any return. In the actual case, the club finesse at trick two would have led to ten tricks.
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