) TUESDAY, IULY 13, 1948 4 Jhn (Daily. Tkbha&Iuuv Membet Intercollegiate Press rOBTI-StXTB tWJLM arriptlaa rmtf ara 1.M par Mnxsler, (1.0 pot amtar mIM, M 91-M fat tin to fir re yea:. KI.M mailed. tUarle copy ae, raaaaand aally aarlaf. tb tckaol rul except Monday aad Satardaya, vacatiaaa aad examlaaUaa acrlaaa, toy Um UaivaraUf Nebraska aader tae maervtatoa a! the Publication Board, entered a Baeona CUm Matter at la fort OKlre ta Lincoln. Nebraska, ander Act ol Onpriraa, March S. 1878. aad at pedal rata at poatac provided (or la aectioa 1103. Act of October 8, 1911. authorized aeptemaor -1. 1UL lb' daily fteraiuui pabiirbea oy tne stadeata of the Dafventty of Nebraska ai a expreuloa ot itndeou eewa and opinion aaiy. A coord In r. to article U of the By Law governing ttudr.nl pobllraMoni and admtaKlered by the Board at PabUeationai It In the declared poller of tho Board Umt eblleaUJn aader Ha JurlsdleUaa ahall be free from rditartmi eenaarthip oa tae part af the Board, or oa toe part of aa ber ol tho traits af tha aarverairy: bat mombera of Um ataft of Tae Daily Nobraskao are peraonally reepoaaiU lor what they aay or to or eauac to be printed.' Editor Jeanne Kerrigan Business Manager Irwin Chesen Former Dean of Women Goes To Tokyo on Education Plan F - - s O HELEN IIOSP. A former dean of women at the University will sail today for Tokyo to be an advisor on female education with the civil informa tion and education section of the allied command there. Dean at Nebraska from 1939 to 1941, Miss Hosp has since been an executive with the American Association of University Women in Washington. She was recently released by this group to take her new post in Japan. Miss Hosp has served on the board of trustees at Goucher col lege and also as field secretary for that school. She has done graduate work at several univer sities. .Since 1941, Miss Hosp has been higher education associate with the A.A.U.W. In Tokyo she will help formu late long range policies for the education of Japanese girls and women designed to give the same rights in this field as men. She Fall Wardrobe Collections . . . THY OUt IH'IJC IOI S- iti:i ..i:si.i4. si MMi:-. meals: LUNCHES SERVED FROM 11-2 P. M. DINNERS SERVED FROM Z-7 P. M. MINIM L'MLY PRICED AT 50 A 60 CENTS ALSO FOl A T.AI SPECIALTIES V. JfT at I 1310 O St. 2-3112 AIR C ONDITION !) FOR 1 Ol R C OMFORT Fall sportswear collections offer a stimulating array of college fashions for next season. Accord ing the the recent "Back-to-Col-lege" section in Women's Wear Daily, designers and manufac turers have put their efforts into developing some brand new ideas for the 1948 college season color and fabric co-ordination, new sil houttes and trends. That old fashioned look var iously called "Victoria n," "Quaint," "Godey's Lady's" (but never Gibson Girl) is the strong est trend evident in clothes styled and priced for the college girl a trend that comes within the established success-silhouttes of snug bodices, sloped shoulders, full skirts. Fabrics that suggest Vic torian richness (lots of velveteen); colors in the Victorian palette (dark, subtle plaid colorings, taupe, as examples); and trim mings like braid, ball-fringe and embroideries all slant casual dres ses in the "old-fashioned look" direction. A more classic look (never mannish but not too frilly, either) is another fall classic; it's fabrics like tweeds and fancy worsteds that carry the classic message. A new silhoutte has been added to this year's styles: Straighter looking skirts with hidden fullness, usually concentrated in the back. This is the newest silhoutte that effects a comfortable compromise on fullness. Pleats, too (both pressed and unpressed) are the designers' pet ways of working this welcome variation in sil houtte. Campus favorites in fabrics will advise with the Japanese ministry of education and other such agencies, and with allied staff olficers. Miller & Paine pA&AQfdA. Inspiration House ifX fa faalwuzct JLiO('VTKI) in kimhallcres.1. Inspiration House presents a new theme in interior decoration. Mil ler's planned the Interiors as one rolor unit, taking it tones from the Nehraska landscapes. I.iting room-dinette lire cool green oner ax a foil for sunlight streaming through the terrace tcimloirs. Sturdy, timeltss Oakmasler furniture make the lit in" room renter of family r litilies. BeDROOMS are on a oonwnient Iiasis, and Mil ler's lias fiited llie deeor to individual memhers of the family. Paintings Iy Nclirar-kan artists wer seleeted Iy Miller's for the complete toiied-lo-Ne-Iiraska touch. AS A SWIM IN &r5) THE BEAUTIFUL fTt SALT WATER (-J; POOL come up with fresh starts for fall, Women's Wear Daily editors find. Men's wear flannel looks newest in dark oxford gray; corduroy gets a new fashion slant in colors like taupe, raisin and bittersweet. Both velveteen and corduroy are tuned into the Victorian trend trimmed with braid etchings; combined with old-fashioned looking calico prints. Velveteen with tweed is another old-fashioned fabric com bination seen insportswear. Plaids, too, look newest in their Victor ian color versions combinations or dark, subtle colors like brown and black. Tweed returns to the campus, offering a refreshing addition to the casual suit lines. Inidescent color effects add more talking points to tweeds and plaids. And tweed fits into both the classic and Victorian sides of fall sports wear; more tailored and detailed for the classic approach; more fitted and flared, softened with velveteen and subtle colors for the old-fashioned angle. Cottons are more important this fall than they ever have been for college wear dark solids, plaids or calico prints all line up (especially in blouses) as color-co-ordinated counterparts for skirts. Color co-ordinations (separates matched up in different fabrics) will be the big fad this full. There will be dyed-to-match colors in sweaters and skirts; in skirts and blouses; in skirts and jackets of two different fabrics. In fact, separates for college come out looking more than ever like cos tumes this year. Skirts and blouses appear in good quantity looking both like two-piece dresses and separates. There are color links in patterned woolens and solid jersey or cotton, for example another way of achieveing a color bridge between separate items. The 1948 season will see more "extra" separates novelties for practical uses; such as, weskits that can be co-ordinated with a matching skirt; jersey pantaloons (fall replacement for the petti coat) which are bright and warm er under full plaid skirts (and they'll also double as an alterna tive to jeans); blazers to star again as the real separate jacket of the season; ski sweaters and ski pants the winter uniform at many campuses are newsworthy with new features such as the slip-on-elastic-satin heel. Classic sweaters can mean semi fitted or boxy. Semi-fitted sweat ers have come up stronger in short-sleeved slipons that look better than evtr with skirts of the season (most often tucked in.) Boxy (not bulky) cardigans have a slight edge on semi-fitted car digans in fall lines. Washability is the big sweater news this year; with many of them featuring shrinkage-controlled woolen yarns. Soft yarns in fine-gauge knits are more plentiful than in many years; they are shaped for the skirt sil houettes and mood of fall sports wea r. Blouses to wear with separate skirts have their biggest talking points in yokes again but this fall the yokes will be neater, with fine stitching and tucking. Coats present a comprehensive picture for college selling this year: There's style for both cam pus and date wear. Big collars that look young on both full and fitted coats command attention from a fashion point of view. From a utility standpoint, linings take the spotlight pile linings for warmth, removable linings in water-repellant coats for all-season wear, etc. A wide range of crisp fabrics will be found in the traditional wide-skirted evening dresses. And here will also be seen the revival of the princess silhoutte; shirring and lace to build out the bust-line. Y.M. Presents Film Foreign GREETING CARDS for Every Occasion Goldenrod Stationery Store 215 North 14th Street On Thursday evening at 8 p.m. in Love Library auditorium, "Schubert's Serenade," a dramatic musical story based on the beloved music of Franz Schubert, will be presented by the Foreign Film Committee of the university Y. M. C. A. Such Schubert favorites as "Serenade," "Ave Marie" and "Unfinished Symphony" will be presented by the Ballet, Chorus and Orchestra of the Paris Opera. Lillian Harvey and Louis Jouvet will play the leading roles. As an added attraction, several American short subject features A will be shown. Price of admission is fifty rents, including tax. Tick- jets may be obtained at the YM 'and YW offices in the Tempi land Ellen Smith Hall, the Reg istrar's office, or at the oVor Thursday evening. ( smm session HDGHEST CASIH1 IFESQCES , PAID FOR USED TEXTBOOKS WE PAY MORE! BECAUSE WE ARE NATIONWIDE BOOK DEALERS. HEADQUARTERS FOR CAMPUS EEI)S v Me&ada BOOK STORE Open daily 12:30 to 9 p. m. 1 J LU