The Nebraskan Wednesday, Nov. 16, 1960 Page 4 All That Glitters Will Be At 1960 Military Ball By Eleanor Billlings What's the long and the 6hort of it for the 1960 Mili tary Ball? Will toe fashions be similar to those of past years, or is the trend toward the more elegant long gowns? These were some of the questions put to fashion co - ordinators and fashion ex perts from several Lincoln department stores, and the answers they gave form an interesting fashion picture for the 1960 Military BalL 'Lots f GUtter Summed up in one phrase, the fashion theme for the ball, which traditionally opens the University social season, is "lots of glitter," according to Miss Mary Louise Babst, fash ion co-ordinator for Miller and Paine. As girls look forward to the ball the big decision will be TRADITIONAL! EXTRA-TRIM POST-GRAD Slacks P.?ftGr3j f tra&tiettftHy ttyUd for tttoftt Upr4 nm yooV ahrsjs fc4 m lor! Emtxrfk, ptefcttem front, pi1 uff4sl bottoms. At Om snsrteg e!ift tbvp; in s boat of was3 M fabriM ttoa Hi to f34L "orcokxl! Iff 73 ftlomasMarrs pwtw . sen MctsM-lt, Heat C9. 2"b'rf1acM . I. M Orffers ajorb) v. "" J JL IjDlR , i EXTRA-TRIM! C - iiiiii yjjaAajJajajLsjsaississsissjuuaJigasssssssssaissssassssssisia GOING ON A VOODSY? THEN YOU NEED QUENTINS: SLEEK FITTING TAPER PANTS 7.98 to 29.95 WARM AND C0M0DI0US LODEN COATS- Up to 69.95 TOASTY WARM SHETLAND. SWEATERS, either crewneck at 9.98 or Brooks Brother ""Style cardigan at 1 1.98 ALL WOOL CREW SOX at 89c OR KNEE SOX at 1.95. Adler ivies. VILLAGER ROUND COLLAR OXFORD CLOTH SHIRTS 5.93 and a pair of gloves These things you need if it's to be a sort of dressy woodsy of course, We hove o few detectable dressy dresses at the moment. Come in. m cotfisMi mmm to trap you 3 3 s 3 m 2 ft SI 3 a auentms 1 the length of the dress to wear this year. The answer is both long and short, Miss Babst and Virgin ia Bush, sales promotion di rector at Hovland-Swanson said. There will be more long evening dresses worn at this year's ball than in past j years. But Miss Babst said short gowns will again pre vail this year. Miss Bush said a poll of the houses on the University and Wesleyan campuses in dicated a preference for the short gowns. Practicality The reasons the girls gave for choosing the short length gowns included the practical ity of the short gowns. They can be worn for many other things, including other dances held on campus and fraterni ty parties. Miss Babst believes the fact that the shorter dresses arei easier to manage, simpler to care . for and wear has brought about the preference for these dresses. "There is no doubt that the longer dresses come in a range of styles and fabrics that tend to make them much more elegant, said .Miss Babst, "and comparedto what there has been, there wiu pc more long gowns uus year, What's new on the fashion scene? The dress with the "cold shoulder" is making an appearance this year. This dress has a strap over one shoulder for a very interest ing effect. Bright Colors Dresses in bright colors will be seen this year. A great deal of red is being shown by the local stores; the new jade green has been a popular color, as has tur- (juuisc, max uie ixaujuonai i white. Pale colors, including gold and pink, provide a subtler hilt 0m1a.lv cmar shniA in H colors but black is always sophisticated. New tones this year include the oranges, from very bright to subdued and blended tones. The sty les? Rounded skirts, camisole tops and scoop necks will be seen. Man dresses have the coveredup look. Tbesr r,iar be sleeve- less, high necked, with low; V-neck backs for interest! coming and going. .Many) dresses nave beading and se quins, Tunic skirts are being i shown and separates also be worn. may Popular fabrics for this E .'ear include chiffon, tafetta. satin, brocades and the peren nial velvet. Some dresses are coming with their own matching coats, and others have stoles. Luxurious, deep-pile jackets are coming in white, beige, and black to go with almost any evening ensemble. Long full velvet coats that can be worn as an evening coat and can double as an all-purpose coat are being shown, also. Elegant Jewelry Accessories follow the "glit ter" theme. Jewelry is very elegant. Drop earrings, necklaces with many strands of large beads, and large pins worn at the w aist or in back at the end of a V-neck can add a great deal to the effect created by a gown. With a long formal, long white gloves create formality, but short gloves may be worn. Evening bags, small and glittering, may match or con trast with the dress. For those who are more daring, Miss Babst suggested a fur muff as an accessory. Shoes are long and high, and come in a variety of fabrics and styles as lavish as those of the dress they are to match. Shoes may be of a "tapestry" fabric and come with a matching purse. Blue and brown shoes of "precious metal" can also be found at local department stores. Gold lune would provide an ele gant accent for the right dress. Judas Stole Shotc' Dr. Meierhenry Tells Of Impressions Abroad "But Judas stole the Show" a comment heard in Ger many, was the title of a speech delivered Monday by Dr. Wesley C. Meierhenry, assistant dean of Teachers College. Meierhenry spoke at the Nebraska Farm Bureau Fed eration and told of his im pressions abroad as he at tended an international edu cation conference in Amster dam. Passion Play Meierhenry overheard the comment during the intermis sion of the Passion Play which was held in Oberam mergau, Germany. This started Meierhenry to thinking about what it is in the human race that makes people pay more attention to the meanness and orneryness in men instead of love and goodness. He commented that it is evident, upon viewing many historic monuments and areas around the world, that much has been, and is still, made memorial to the beast ly and destructive side of man. Meierhenry then related how this misguided attention became even more obvious as he and his wife toured su h historic cities as Rome, Pans and London. : 'Memorial to Death' "The coliseum in Rome is but another example a memorial to death," said Meierhenry. 1 The whole trip gave the im pression that the United States should devote more Captain's Sbrink-contfolled $ .virgin wool, 10 nylon D I Size cuarameed s 1127 R A i f f j j Attention 1! lm 1 &f' IBj ji jl- - l j fi" j 1 I . n ; Q Har, In hand soma Olympic ( Whtta and full rang oi tht ! popular color you'll want for day In day out waar. toft 90 virgin wool, 10 'nylon with t extra nylon ralnforcamant at too and high tpMcad haaf. j Comforlablt lO lnchlanath. Kt threvth 1J. Mock up I now on this Ac of Sports Casual. 7 J V t t LITTLE MAN WelLY L KEPUSe TO LATE IN THE TEr-rCYg. effort in four areas, Meier henry said. They are econom ic development, stability of currency, work for the honor of working and appreciation of natural beauty. "Some counttries abroad possess an even more stable currency than ours, and thns ly will not accept the Ameri can dollar," said Meierhenry. And also in the field of eco nomic development, some countries overseas have tremendous desire to produce, much greater than ours. "The United States needs! to get the economic system operating at a higher level and not as Judas did, sell our souls for a few coins," Meierhenry said. Main Feature dock Varsity: "Inherit The Wind," 1:40, 4:11, 6:42, 9:13. Stat: "Fast and Sexy," 1:23, 3:24, 5:25, 7:26, 9:27. Nebraska: Dog of Flanders," 1:30. "My Pal WoJf," 3:30. Lincoln: "Where the Hot Wind Blows," 1:00, 3 00, 5:05, 7: JO, 9:20. Stuart: A Breath of Stan da.," 1 25. 3 2o, 5 2", 7 25 9 25 Golds OF NEBRASKA . HAS Of lVlf!H wSteS f A t 4 I ON CAMPUS ACCEPT ZTLiOenT TU I c . IN Y0U CAS,AMSS UlbtiQ- Janike to Head Ag Committee Edward W. Janike. director of the Agricultural Extension Service, was appointed chair man of the extension com mittee on organization and policy at the annual meeting of the American Association of Land-Grant Colleges and State Universities. Composed of twelve mem bers, the committee is t h e ! official policy-making group for the nation s agricultural extension service. Janike is a graduate of the University and served as sec retary of the Omaha L i v e stock Exchange from 1945 to 1943. He came to the Univer- cifw : sfnto 4-TT fluh Iparlpr asr - i. later wamp art rii. rector and then associate di rector of the Nebraska Agri cultural Extension Service. This past summer, Janike was named director of the Service. TWO LEGAL GIANTS COL LIDE IN OXE OF THE CLASSIC COURTROOM DRAMAS OF ALL TIME. Tracy March Kelly Shop Doily 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 Girls, Do You Have A Storage Problem With Your Shoes? hole Keep night, tore elonet Plus Romance As Winds ' Cold weather, cold feet; this seems to be the situa tion on campus this week with only four pinnings and three engagements an nounced this Monday night. Pinnings Pam Rider, Alpha Omicron Pi freshman in Teachers from Lincoln to Steve McCoy, Beta Theta Pi sophomore in Arts and Sciences from Lin coln. Lou Eden, Alpha Xi Delta freshman jn Teachers from Lincoln to Tom Cooper, Kap pa Sigma sophomore in Arts and Sciences from Lincoln. Barb Carey, Gamma Phi Beta senior in Teachers from Lincoln to Dwight Meierhen ry, Phi Delta Theta sopho- Ag Extensionists Honor Hardin Chancellor Hardin has been elected to membership in Ep silon Sigma Phi, a national agricultural extension honor ary, for his service to argicul ture and the Federal Exten sion Service. The award was made at a meeting of the American As sociation of Land-Grant Col leges and Universities in Washington, D.C. this week. Chancellor Hardin ad dressed the assembly of 1,300 university and college presi dents and administrators, who were gathered to discuss the educational needs of the na tion and the problems of in creasing enrollment and na tional crisis. The Association, which Har din heads, is made up of in stitutions in all 50 states which currently are enrolling more than 730,000 students. Read Nebraskan Want Ads I 60tour for amour.. . CWfRpBS?I$ON RffiSQ p.m., Mon. end Thurs. 1 HERE'S YOUR ANSWER . . . NEW PLASTIC, SHELF SHOE BAG . . .' HOLDS 10 PAIRS OF SHOES! The$f Fraturett Son-TOi Clated-Cord Shelf Tuin-Mrhrl-Plalrd Hooks Cold Diamond-Quilt Top and Cuff Supt'n$ion Full Length 57" Zipper Removable Shelves for Handbag Storage ' your hoe in perfect order anil in ferfert too. Tbh convenient storage bag et you 10 pain of .hoe free from ut and off the floor! GOLD'S Motion Street Added Savings of Cools Blow more in Dental College from Lincoln. Connie Miller, Pi Beta Phi sophomore in Arts and Sciences from Holdrege to Larry Schuster, Theta Xi jun ior in Engineering from Be atrice. Engagements Jane Jeffrey, Alpha Phi senior in Arts and Sciences from Wayne to Jack March, Sigma Chi alum from Wayne. Barbara Snavely, Sigma Kappa alum from North Platte to Tony McEvoy, sen ior in Teachers from Has tings. Dorothy Livicky, F e d d e Hall senior in Home Econ omics from Seward to Bob IMeduna from Wahoo. Nebraskan Want Ads CLASSIFIED AD POLICY No. Word! 1 da. 2 da. I a da. 4 d. 1-10 I .S I . VOO 11 -lft ,M .80 ) l.W ..2 1C-20 1.2S I SO 21-28 .70 1.10 1.4a 1.7ft I . 1.2S 1 85 2. on tl-SS .90 1.40 1.85 I 2.2S 1.00 1.55 2 OS ) 2JW FOR SALE 1.'S Triumph TR3. good condition, hard and loft tons. (100. Good Christmas prr-enl for Dad. Coat $3,000 new. CR 7-833 switnrs. l-', Volkrwaeon 1 Dr. Stdin . . . Radio. Heatr. Port-a-walla. Excel lent condition . . . Phone ID 4-32. EMPLOYMENT PART TIME JOB! "avy Veterans. Fun time day's pay for each evenisx at Naval Reserve. PH GA 3-3030. FOR RENT 24th and 8. Choice ground floor. Three rooms and bath. New stove, refrleer- t ator. Super elean. See to appreciate. Adults $57 50. Phone TV '-7074. j PERSONAL: If on don't believe in stortficauoB of militarism, then doat attend toe tniK ilary ball. . . f C: Sorry, not during vacation . . . j Ify dad said "No" . . . and he wa I very emphatic M. Don't read this ad, don't save Sunaav eve. December 4 tor something spe cial. And above all. don't remember to flryl out whst it is we're talking about '. t REMINDER . . . meeting of SOC.M chairman at B A M. hours. 733 North lih, 7 P.M. tonight to find out what is going December 4th. LOST . . . Boy a IfXK) ciam ring, black set. Initials J. F. Plndcr tail HE 2 )5.4. 'til 9:00 p.m. 2.98 Floor Green Stamps town & campm itififr i ma