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PAGE TEN
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
IRTtrmAVn (1C'Tt1R 'R tT IgRd
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1964
IN THE CLASSROOM:
Conservatism Marks Dress
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY
By MERLE JACOB
and CAROL HASKILL
The look called ye-y6 in sophis-
ticated circles replacing the best
look for ,classroom wear. Accord-
ing to one local business woman,
heavy bulky sweaters and beads
are not as popular with women
this year, and few are wearing
them to class.
"This year the co-eds are more
conservative in both style arid col-
or, but they are very smart dress-
ers," she said.
Y&y6 is casual, carefree, and
young, and campus stores are
'flooded with sweaters to help
achieve it-all colors, shapes and
textures. There are huge cuddly#
turtlenecks of imported Irish wool,I
and slim tubed sweaters whose
ribbing resembles men's socks.
V-necked sweaters with a knit-
ted dickey are the most popular
on campus, but sweaters with zip-
pers instead of buttons or with
ties are also seen from the Frieze
Bldg. to the zoology lab.
Mohair is no longer plain but
multi-colored or appliqued with
various colored designs. The most
fashionable student will choose a
delicate crocheted model, longish
and straight.
In both classroom and sports
wear, the blouse is being replaced
by the knitted shell. Helenca and
cotton-knit shells with long sleeves
are being worn under jumpers and
with skirts. Besides being smart
looking, they require little or no
ironing, which makes them a' big
favorite with the busy student.
She will wear her sweaters or
shells with a straight or slightly
A-line skirt, wrap-around or cu-
lotte. The biggest change in skirts
is weave and color rather than
style. Herringbone, tweeds, hounds-
tooth, glen plaid and plain checks
usually in black and white, make
up the majority of skirt materials.
And the really well-dressed girl
won't hesitate to mix, say, strip-
ed stockings with a herringbone
tweed.
Plain colors are subdued-loden,
brown, black, gray, cranberry and
brick.
To brighten the dark classroom
picture, students are combining
their dark shades with bright ones.
Favorite mix and match colors
now are cranberry and pink, blue
and green, light blue and navy,
light blue-and cranberry, and yel-
low and black..
The Pin Collar
Designed to be worn with a pin
or as a plain collar, this
traditional style will add new
interest to your shirt wardrobe.
Available in solid colours
and stripes; from $6.50
Give- Reasons S
For Pleasure
In Barbering
Barbers, strange as it may seem,
have many varied and interesting
opinions about their profession.
"I like to consider myself a
tonsorial artist," one campus bar-
ber explained recently. "A hair-
cut to me is a creation, a work
of art . . . poetry."
Another barber, though not as
enraptured, also indicated the ar-
tistic joys of barbering.
Continental Favorite
"I like most of all to give a
continental." When asked what
this type of haircut looked like, he
pointed to his own head, showing
what seemed to be four separate
waves of hair, each one entirely
entangled in the other. But the
Princeton and the flattop were
considered the most popular.
The last barber in the shop
seemed to think that barbering
was much more than just cutting
hair.
"A barber has to be a psychol-
ogist, a psychiatrist, and a mind
reader. He has to satisfy the!5
customer and also give a good
haircut. He has to convince the
customer that the barber is more
capable of giving a haircut than
the person in the chair, and yet
he also has to concede the patron's
will. All and all, being a good,
barber is not as easy as it looks."
Men Dye Hair
For Success
"Color it young!" This is the
increasing demand of men who
want their hair dyed.
Eddie Pulaski, a leading prac-
titioner of men's hair coloring
In New York, says that today 85;
per cent of his customers are men ,
in the business and professional
world.
He adds that the prospect of
looking younger draws more male
customers each year. The econom-
ic advantage of youth in busi-.
ness seems to . be an incentive to
have hair dyed.
Pulaski says that the man who-
feels younger also feels more se-
cure in the competitive business ..
situation. Divorcees from another
important segment of the clien-
tele:. and wives and girlfriends
also send Pulaski a large num-
ber of his hair coloring customers. I
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SHOWN BEING WORN by the man above is a sport coat of
hand-loomed Shetland wool made using soft hand tailored
construction. The tie is an imported English Club figure. The
women's suit was made in Scotland of imported Scottish tweed
material, which come custom made in a wide variety of patterns
and colors. Clothes are courtesy of Camelot Bros.
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