The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 27, 1942, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, March 27, 1942
DAILY NEBRASKAN
Peggy Wears Navy . . .
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The Great Democratic Institution,
Weatherman, Has Fun in Nebraska
By June Jamieson.
National defense or no national
defense, something's got to be done
about the weatherman. It's not
that we don't like the weather
man. In fact, it's quite the op
posite. We like, the weatherman.
We think he's a nice, democratic
institution.
How are you going to have a
t
V
mm
Three red fabric roses highlight the conservative navy blue of
this silk crepe dress from Simon's worn by Theta Peg Lemon. Her ac
cessories are of navy, including the off-the-face straw hat.
'42 Dresses Are Just
What They Used to Be
Reversibles
Are Rainy
Day Order
Rainy wfather attire on the
campus features the ever popular
reversible. Turned wrong side out
the so-called water proof mater
ial seems to keep the student dry,
but what about the coat? Soggy
shapeless reversibles are seen hung
on the doors and in the halls of
almost every house on the campus.
Regardless, however, of the pro
ficiency of these protecters, the
lads and lassies still cling to their
reversibles in rainy weather.
And what about boots? The ma
jority of the students who still
attend their classes regularly dur
ing this lazy spring weather are
caught without their feet cover
ings when the pre-April showers
pour down, but they do own boots.
The coeds stick to their brown,
red and white pull-over boot, some
I of cowboy style and others featur
! ing aviation wings. The boys wear
anything from zipper boots to
dressy tight fitting rubbers, that
! is. when they take the time to put
! them on. The majority of the time
i thev wade across nuddles in their
rubber soled saddles.
Summed up in one short phrase,
the Nebraska students wear re
versibles and boots in rainy
weather. Well, doesn't everyone?
democracy without democratic in
stitutions, i. e., the weatherman?
There's something a little grim
about going to bed at night with
no idea what the condition of the
ground's going to be when you
look out the window the next
morning. It might be covered
with snow. So you put away the
nice spring suit you had cleaned
and pressed and throw the saddle
shoes back on the closet floor.
Attired in a parka and ranger
boots, you struggle to open the
front door against an 80 mile an
hour wind. Extending your arms
to either side, you're blown from
the Drug to Sosh and make a
perfect three-point landing before
the door of your classroom. Noth-
By Edith Laslo.
Ballerina skirts, peg-topped
skirts un?ven hem lines, net
hacks, all of these and dresses too.
We i.f the soldier boy home on
leave when he sees what the gal
he left behind is now wearing.
Back to 1914 we go for our style
inspirations, and when we say
back, we mean back. Hemlines
th.it hit m in the places that only
iJiss Amelia tan wear with im
punity art- the order of the day.
The only trouble is that the hem
lines l'in t even hit one evenly all
the w.iy around. They just kmda
go u; I tl.'-n come down again.
jinn r with your date will prob
ably c.v .!-. a couple of grande
j-tes n t rt'ious twi.st. and what
h-tve vei what with your date in
a b iileiir. i dinner gown. You no
lon'T h.e to view the Ballet
f'.usHe t-i get a glimpFe of calves
that h .v. had the benefit of two
yeirs of refj.red physical ed.
This Job's Draped.
A!v. i tf.e d.nner lir.e ;m a lit
tle dr-m. fonroct'd by the de-ftn.-rs
tor the worldly wis- wom
an uh.rii i on.SiHU pnr.c.paiiy of a
flrifH-.l t .,24 10b with a .!;t
but doggone it, we're wearing the
to think thev would be. Not only rags to fight it in In an-
other ten years we 11 be wearing
are we fighting a war like in 1914. : ,.0pard skins again.
Technologists
Hear Manter
This Weekend
Meeting here tomorrow, the Ne
braska Society of Medical Tech
nologists will hear an address by
Dr, W. H. Manter at a banquet
at the-Cornhusker hotel.
Dr. Paul M. Bancroft of Lincoln
and Dr. J. P. Tollman of Omaha
will talk at the groups afternoon
sessions at the Lancaster county
medical society quartets in the
Sharp building. Dr. Tollman is
pathologist at the UN hospital
in Omaha and is the new advisor
of the society.
Officers will be elected and in
stalled at the meeting with Ida
Carr Blore of Lincoln :;c!ieduled to
succeed Gertrude Eb rs Hugnes
of Broken Bow.
ing daunted at this unconventional
method of getting to an eight
o'clock, you sit down, thaw out
and take a six week's examina
tion. After Exam Tra-La.
Here's the catch: "When the
exam is over, you stroll out onto
the mall and meet people dressed
in jackets and no hats going to
their nine-o'clocks. Naturally, you
feel rather conspicuous in Eskimo
garb because the sun's shining,
it's 80 in the shade and som
one asks you to join them on
picnic that evening.
After all, you don't let a thing
like weather get you down; so,
casually avoiding the subject, you
acquiesc and plan a big deal east
of town. And so home to lunch
and the afternoon siesta. True to
your darkest suspicions, when you
awake (after dreaming of a sunny
beach in Florida), it's not raining
liquid gold, but good old-fashioned
rain. That automatically cancels
the picnic and suggests the al
ternative of a good movie. By
the time you are dressed in rain
coat, rain hat and old shoes, the
snow has turned to sleet and it's
too slippery to venture beyond
the inside of the window. So you
give it up and go into hiberna
tion until summer. At least, we do.
Prof. H. Vance White, head of
the metallurgy department of Vir
ginia Polytechnic institute, has
discovered an alloy that softens
as it grows old. It is a combina
tion of lead with a small quantity
of tin.
Coeds To Wear
Day Dresses
To Tea Dance
Oneot the university's largest
annual social functions, the tea
dance given by the military de
partment tomorrow from 3:30 to
5:30 p. m. at the Cornhusker, will
see Nebraska coeds dressed in aft
ernoon wear and men in military
uniforms.
According to Marcia Beckman.
one of the hostesses, coeds will
wear afternoon dresses, hats and
high heels and carry purse and
gloves.
After Official Orilcr . . .
Men Do JSot Object, Coeds
Laugh al Cuff less Trousers
. . . for Defense
By John Bauermeister. ' been without them and they have
After March 30 .1 will be offi- always PPrc.l quite anky
cial. Tailors will then no longer won-t notke cuffless trousers be
be permitted to manufacture rause half the clothes you see now
trousers with cuffs on thern and are uniforms and they don't have
no one knows just how much the ;iffs."
coats will .'lifter. The government. The Prof Says,
endeavoring to ave on the nn- , Getting a male vote on the sub
sumption of wool, has is.-oie.l an j,.,t we approached Prof. Karl
order re.stri tir.g all .suits to be Arndt, who was ticating himself
manufactured with a ri.ii..rr.iini ta k rj,t of repast in the (,rib. and
amount of material used.
; the versatile professor paid he
Prcvr.t.rg the proposition to iKky jf they continued to let
uti'HiT-ts in and arout the fotn
Crib, your reporter revived re
plies of no i -oik em at all to out
cries of d.sg iKt and resentment
far tr.ii.arii the no' rejruUtion ror
him wear pants. Bill Marsh, who
was helping the professor, threat
ened to leave for the service if
"plus 4's" ever came back.
John Anderson, coming in from
enough u ft the front of the j-kirt ' the men. it -en.ed practical to hi "mill km" cla.'s answered the
t'i hw I'irt a bit Of the alKies. urop uie iujls - - j t1'"1"" "mi. i'j
on t feel any different than what
f have on. The only thirr that will
I . . . -1.. fc...,.K ilh f 1..
Our or.lv fomment is that we can OKin i unw-r v "
iK.ni, hW .nlv three women coat. Coed Viewed the who.e Ml-
who h.-e the torv,s to carrv the ! uation entirely from the humoroi j;afpn ik that a new style wiU be
thinx: oM and they don't go to Ne-' angle remarking that the boys , r the next three years or
brMk. are! one's na.i.e m ! would certa.nly look d.ffeierH in ,.
Ine new crraLiJn. 3quvn v4'"Ju?m uiuii i
with a 'tame back wiin an imer.-sui k i.:r.g tf.e cur;-, u uxy provni"i
nit with enoi.h ah trays. "Th'-y i
r.e i aft it." he cm- i
V.e off the flaps on ;
,k ,-r.oe afternoon gown that! quip, "w" t least they won tb- IM v.,th enoi.-h
,4s 4, it. ba'k praai'allv noth- able to use them for ash trayx. b it ,n take oft tr..
ne tut ;.! of r.'t. .-soft of a there probably won't tx- many ri.-n tm.jed. "and tak
ron.
S'-im. )!,''
blv
llA
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" . . .( ....... jlj. il u,in'l ftike 11... ,.,.,L,.Im Kiit j K n tl.v tuii.
t4 4irr' t ir.tal.z.rg. i' m; ii-r "J " j
v.rt M rt .' to help the l.-vi. for- 'any different ' off the lapis tr.at's p.ifig l far. '
v,t uher l-iev're home ' leave, i Some thoiiRl.t that dropping the Ah Ut i,,)-!. roat. Nancy I
Th- of the dress in Mri'tly : cuffs wouldn't be noticeable at Coe mirnnied op the women' view ,
v..n,.,..l but for the Kl.L-h din- : all. Marly H'.ta wi,e ... r...... v,,ui. i-n .neM v. in lenan.iy
;,-,-. ,t the hen.line dared. "I bke f office lrojii-ra
I . . . rli',.,.,,. un,i in have a Iwav.t
l l wnai ir.ey i:.s--i iiiii'i" - -
Yn;. .t les am I
I
tij
i J rt
r deflated in thoe kind of coats. :
Kik-baks or no kick-bar ks. i
the M--.v ftrearr.bned .i,t will be
w.th us for orne time to come.
Tl- g'rl.i an jovfully watch from
the jude'.nes till the retriction
hit them; an for the U,y. the gcv-
rnm'T.t will ,robably not orily be j
telling them to wear cuff lew ;
: trousern, but which color to wear
land where to wear them.
arc (trrttiv!K2:iH3i
futxrMBMrjairf
eS Biffle niter reUlw flakej-tlugs and whirl-cool
smoke in Medico pipes, cigarette and cigar bolder.
YOUR DRUG STORE
For il.i in anil ihiv out
liargain. llie
OWL PHARMACY
IIR No. lllh k P 2-10CS
Ruituthat the Sbocfoi otoHeAed
I I ydN
If you're feeling a little
blue . . .
Deck yonrtelf out in
Arron't nrtc Spring
Tonr$ . . t
-'m- Yp0h i t mil
And the trnrld it brnutijul
as Trthnirolor.
Tlii pooil-looking new
Arrow enM-tnlil" cnnici
in shirt, tie, lianrlkrr
chief ail tliort. (nie
in anil see f'prinz Tone
todjy . . . name one
riioHii in the current
iuc of LIf L,
r"iA.
iTUirimr-
ARROW;
smtrs