BEAUTY Continued From Page 26 Fall is here and it's time to take advantage of how the sun has lightened your hair. By using Spectrum Technique. Jon Spiro uses at least 3 or 4 shades, each one just a step away from your natural color to blend beautifully with your skin and bring sparkle to your eyes. No touch ups every three weeks. Jon calls it color for everyone. Complete Beauty Studio & Tanning Salon 5562 Drake Road, West Bloomfield Hours: Tues., Wed., Sat. 8-5, Thurs. 8-7, Fri. 8-10 661-1881 661-1880 26400 W. 12 Mile at Northwestern Hwy. (inside the Franklin Savings Center) Hours: Mon. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m., Thurs. till 8 p.m. ■ 355-3377 144 FALL '87 males make judgments about personality traits from the female facial features. Using 16 photographs from the first part of the experiment, 82 male stu- dents were asked to indicate the females whom they would go out of their way to help (altruistic behavior), and to choose for such acts as dating, mating and childrearing. Interestingly, the results were mixed. "Women who have the attractive traits were seen by men as more bright, sociable and assertive, but also more vain and unreliable," Cun- ningham reports. Cunningham elaborated on these results in his article, writing that "facial feature measures predicted both flatter- ing and socially undesirable personal characteristic judg- ments..." Of the women in the photographs, 'those with more desirable neonate, mature and expressive features were seen as being more bright, sociable and assertive, with less likeli- hood of medical problems or sterility, but with more vanity and a greater likelihood of hav- ing extramarital affairs than their peers." Furthermore, he wrote, "Those (women) with more attractive features, such as greater eye height, and smaller nose area, were more likely to be (objects of) self-sacrificial and physically risky actions (by men), or (to be chosen for) a job, dating, sexual preferences, and childrearing, although not for monetary in- vestments (i.e., lending money). Such results suggest that the possession of attractive facial features may be of survival val- ue for adults." Cunningham intends to con- tinue exploring attractiveness, and the benefits that derive from possessing it, although the area is by no means the only research in which he is in- volved. Still, he wants to follow up his latest experiment with