Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 298, Decatur, Adams County, 19 December 1962 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

Beauty Technique In Asia Strange * By GAT PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI) - Getting one’s hair done in some Southeast Asia cities often is enough to make it stand on end. And with some of the techniques used in combing by beauticians I’ve encountered.it does. But, keep the hair done one must—not only for appearance’s sake, but for morale. If I wanted to get into politics (and I don’t). I’d suggest that the Kennedy administration could do a tot for under-developed countries by offering some beauty technicians for a stay. Recruit Mr. Kenneth (Mrs. Kennedy’s hairdresser) for the Peace Corps. Southeast Asia is just as anxious as Europe to lure tourists. One way to get the female tourist talking favorably about a country, once she's home, is to start her talking about the beauty shops. She’s more apt to tell her neighbor, next year’s tourist, about the hangup hair style she got in Bangkok than she is to tell how her counterpart here digs ditches to help support her iam- <• ily. Take the technique of_ hair teasing, for instance. As done in the shops I’ve visited in this par* i of the world, the process reverse combing to add body is carried to the extreme. Properly done, the hair is teased in the direction of the curl as it comes off the roller. The shops use American-style rollers in setting all right. But as soon as the dried hair is unwound, forth comes the teasing comb. No brush Out first, in most oases. When the hairdresser is through teasing, every strand is standing on end. How this thatch ever is converted into a civilized result baffles me. But with brush or comb skirting the surface, the works is smoothed out. On the surface that is. It is three or four hours later, or the next day, when you try to comb your hair on your own that you find junderneath that facade is hair tangled into a twoinch deep pile. Congress Elevators Confuse Visitors By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — Earlier this year, when the tourist season was in full bloom here, I attempted as a public service to explain how Congress runs an elevator. ■ * I did this because many visitors to the Capitol were winding up on thef wrong floor. Oftentimes, that can be more interesting than winding up on the right floor. But, as a general rule, it is better to know where you’re going. The confusion stemmed from the fact that the floors of the Capitol were designated on the elevator signal panel by letters of the alphabet — “B,” “F,” “P” and “G.” Could Get Confusing Suppose, for example, that you wanted to go to the ground floor. If you boarded an elevator and told the please,” he would take you to the top floor. The reason is that “G” stands for “gallery.” Tn order to get to the ground floor, you would have to ask for “F,” which stands for “first.” The ground, or “F-for-first,” floor usually is called the “Street” floor. There is, however, no “S” on the signal panel. If there were, it could stand for “subway.” As it is, the subway level is designated by the letter “B,” which stands for “basement.” The level on which the House and Senate chambers are located is called the “floor." In order to get there, you asked for “P,” which stands for “principal.” I hope I have made all of this clear because the whole thing has now been changed — at least one end of the capital. Lettrs Replace Numbers In the House wing, the “F,” “P" and “G” letters ' recently were replaced, by numbers “1,” “2” and “3.” The “B” still stands. It still stands for “basement” and still means “subway.” I feel certain the switch from lettering to numbering is going to help a lot. It means that elevators in the Capitol now have two types of signal panels. The ground, or street, level oil the Senate side is “F” and on the House side is “1.” The Senate floor is “P” and the House floor is “2.” The top floor is “G” in the Senate and “3” in the House. It should be borne in mind, however, that the system in the central part of the building is somewhat different. The elevators there designate the floors as “B,” “F,” “P” and “G,” but the floors themselves are marked “H-E” and “S-E.” In short there is no longer any excuse for a visitor getting lost. Any visitor who still has trouble finding his way around the Capitol should go back home and run for Congress. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Went •ds — they get BIG results.

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

' WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 10. 1082