November 18, 1956 — ' ; ' fIHBSHHBHn MB bhMlv’ ■■■■■mmjgtmm JE|2 .. •; ®ibP-n, *- T jt 'if «p- W (^’ M •' - Un^- |J%g £&s* 5* No, it’s not twins. The girl on the right in this composite picture is Carol Ann Grady, looking her normal self—while on the left she’s all gaudied up. Dick Hyde has no trouble deciding which Carol Ann he prefers. Both 17-year-olds, helping TEEN out by modeling for the photo, are seniors at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High SchooL WHAT YOUNG PEOPLE THINK The Boys Like Them Natural By EUGENE GILBERT Gilbert Youth Research Co. Teen-age glamour girls, slath ered with makeup, may inspire wolf whistles, but it's the lass with a natural look who gets the dates. There’s something about excess makeup and low-cut dresses that freezes a young man in his tracks. "If there’s anything I desnise it’s a girl with all that gook on her face,” observes a high school foot ball star. “And slinky dresses, ugh!” A Providence, R. 1., youth com ments: "My steady used to try to dress sexy to make herself look older. But I told her it was the fancy-pancy duds or me, and she sure caught on in a hurry ” All-American Girl Almost unanimously, young men favor the All-American Girl look. They say heavy cake makeup, mas cara and rouge are all right for movie stars, but not for the girls they want to be seen with. A light touch of lipstick and per haps a dab of powder are enough to set off a girl’s natural beauty, they think. One Bronx, N. Y., high school boy remarks: “There’s a cute girl I've wanted to take out a couple of times, but I’m afraid to ask her. The last time I met her at a party she looked like her face was made up to haunt a house.” This young man may not know it_ but girls today look better and dress more neatly than girls of a decade or two ago. After correlating our most recent information on high school stu dents of yesterday and today, we learned: Our teen-ager dresses more neatly than even her older sister 10 years ago. She wears sweaters and skirts that show her figure and thus she has to watch her weight. Her boyish coiffeur is growing to a flattering shoulder length and for school she has adopted a tidy pony tail. She wears custume jewelry less Teeners to Stage Dystrophy Benefit Teen-agers will dance to Glenn Miller's Orchestra Saturday at the Sheraton-Park Hotel to raise money for muscular dystrophy victims. The Thanksgiving dance begins at 9 p.m. A 1957 convertible will be raffled off and a door prize will be a week’s stay for two at the Desert Inn in Las Vegas. Besides Glenn Miller’s Orchestra with Ray McKinley, entertainers at the dance will include Vocalist Marilyn Mitchell and Comedian Jackie Winston. The dance will be sponsored by Opsilon Lambda Phi Fraternity and lota Gamma Phi Sorority, which have local chapters in various Washington high schools. obviously and shows a taste for simplicity. In cosmetics, which be come a part of her daily schedule at about 14, she prefers discreet makeup. Consequently, she looks more natural and a' new maturity shines through. Diet and Health She also is interested in health and diet. So is her boy friend. This emphasis has developed mainly in the last decade. For example, 17.6 per cent of the teen agers we surveyed take vitamin capsules. Why? "Don’t be a goof, man.” admonishes a Texas lad. "The healthier you are, the longer you live. And I want to be around for a long, long time.” Young moderns’ diet-conscious ness is especially apparent in girls 13-17. Thirty-six per cent of them say they watch what they eat. Magic Circles— in, * y J® v’<£, I' 9Kv M IS ■it EJI ■ / jflL «[ m il, mm mk - ’gif HBsgfgp * ■ JR. TEEN’s cameraman caught this cheery group as the boys piled out of a classroom at the Bell Vocational School, on Hiatt place N.W. If yours is the face in one of the magic circles, you win $5. Bring a copy of this issue of TEEN to The Star’s city desk any weekday between 5 and 6 p.m. THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D. C. Weight-watching starts young, and 18 per cent of teen-agers con sider themselves too hefty to be hep. Only 5 per cent, however, follow a strict diet regime for los ing weight. Complexion Concern Os course, dieting is done for other purposes than taking off weight. Eleven per cent of girls and 14 per cent of boys have what they call "serious complexion trouble.” But many mdre than that—nearly one-third, in fact— worry about’ pimples. Only 3 per cent are on connexion diets under doctors’ directions, but many skin worriers are trying on their own hook to control their eating habits and thereby improve- their skins. The critical age for young skins, _ incidentally, is 14-15, and during that time 17 per cent of all teens think they have serious problems. | ON DISCOUNT CORNER § | 9th & E Sts. N.W. | | EVERYBODY ( I IS CHEERING | !-*£/ FOR THE NEW ! Admiral | BIG 14 I PORTABLE TV TI44AL I*ustrife? l IMMI Take It Wherever You Go! • Lightweight , easy-to-cnrry . . . take it from kitchen to bedroom to living room . . . any room in the house. • Like having a second set in every room. • Gives you console performance in a really compact portable ! • Widest choice of solid and two-toned p colors in all TV! POTOMAC’S A ADMIRAL | PORTABLE PRICES "SBF sM 1 start at, Mr Mr m BEJY ON POTOMAC I EASY CREDIT I NEVER AN EXTRA CHARGE FOR 1 FULL FACTORY WARRANTY 1 IIPHTOMACJIf == MrrrrtTlßCTrriCTnyffgrffTTffrHTTSnM pass p«fE == = ■_* X i :w k ■ ~w \ r-9| . B ; JB G ° r °9* = ■ Page 11 - TEEN,