In a time when the Blue House was called Gyeongmudae, there was a barbershop in the neighborhood where Gyeongmudae was located. The owner was Seong Han-mo, a timid, simple man. He seduces (?) his assistant and gets her pregnant. When she talks of having an abortion, he says ‘rounding the numbers can even change the constitution, so if you’re five months along, then you must have the baby.’ He believed that anything the government did must be the right thing to do. On the March 15 election that people criticized as being corrupt, he helped the government by swallowing the voting paper, and helping bury them in the ground. He persuaded Min-ja to have the baby saying since the government has a policy of rounding numbers, a five-month-old baby should be regarded as a whole person. On April 19 1960, Mi-ja’s labor pains become more frequent, and Han-mo heads for the hospital. In the streets, demonstrations demanding for the cancellation of the March 15 election are going on. The students, who are injured by the soldiers’ opening fire on them, think Han-mo in his white gown is a doctor. He lets the hurt students get on the cart with his wife and takes them all to the hospital. The day Nak-an was born is later called the April 19 Revolution. The next year when tanks passed by in front of the barbershop, students were required to shave their heads, which was good news for Han-mo. Time has passed into the 70s.