--m-l V V V V -W -1 Simple versus sophisticated By Leslie Pettis W HEN I was in college (1970-75) clothing was more casual and pragmatic. Sure, we had our "uniform," but it was jeans - Levi's that is , not Calvin Klein, Sergio Valen- ti, Gloria Vanderbilt, Chic or Jordache. Have I neglected any? I hope so. Jeans and flannel shirts in winter and T-shirts or work shirts in summer. My biggest fashion decision was: Should I wear the shirt with the black or white buttons, not what little animal adorns the shirt front. You owned a half-dozen pairs of jeans and rotated the shirts. Come to think of it, that's the way I still dress. Oh well, old habits die hard. If you wanted to dress up you wore Levi cords. Hardly anyone had a suit and if they did it was your basic wed- ding/funeral/job interview suit, preferably dark. Ties were paisley or plain and passed around among room- mates. More important than what the clothing actually was, was what it represented. It was less status- or class- oriented. Part of current fashion is being able to afford it, and if you can't afford the right clothing it's apparent on sight. It bothers me that people are made to feel awkward if they're not dressed according to the fashion of the moment. Yet it is quite possible that this is for financial reaons as much as anything else. Isn't it also interesting that as you're working on your war- drobe, the styles are changing so you can never really keep up? Why worry about what's out or what's in? I think with the type of clothing we wore then it was easier to get to know the person inside. Now you can't get past all that lavender and green. It also seems clothing is used as means of group identification. We dressed to distinguish ourselves from the business/professional world. We wanted to"adopt none of the trap- pings, including clothing, of what we saw as a failed life-style. Now it seems you dress in the uniform of the group you aspire to. The last thing we aspired to was the button-down world, although some hid it better than others. Rennie Davis sells life insurance and Jerry Rubin works on Wall Street. In a -decade we've gone from Yippies to Yuppies. The undergrad years are a time for experimenting and exploring. If you don't experiment, even in something as mundane as clothing, how will you develop a system for judging things? This is the time to be open to a diversity of stimuli. Perhaps they dress now to show that they fit in, or to project an image of fitting in. My generation didn't (unless you were in the MBA program) and it was a hell of a shock to realize your jeans-and-work-shirt days were over. I think students now are preparing themselves early for the impending regimentation. It seems to me that they're rushing it. Relax, you've got over 30 years of dressing the part ahead of you. As Thoreau admonished, "Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes." Join the Daily Arts Staff. II 1 F A W S CI O) Roxie blouse, $45; jumper, $63; Jacob- Striped silk dress, wheat/white by Esme, Italy, $350 (left). Striped wool suit with sons pumps, $45. He's wearing Levis pleated trousers by Antonio Fusco, Italy, $900; striped silk shirt by Daniel shirt, $15; Generra pants, $22, and Schagen, W. Germany, $165; silk tie by Tino Casma, Italy, $45; belt, Peter Bar- shoes, $68. Clothes from Jacobsons. ton's Closet, Italy, $65. Available at Renaissance. Background: Escoffier. Background: Saguro Plant Shop. 6' 0 3 nn l .1 - tr#t MIOC7 Vtl Hc ba le an 611 Z6l _ 7 v. / R6 l z 7 16 Weekend/Friday, March 30, 1984 25 Week