PAGE TWELVE THlE MIHIGAN DIAILY SATUR.DAY. ATUUST 10. 1940O . ._ _ _ i . a.4diV#L .. l iJV.{ F . . V "",~ F i Toss-Together Sports Outfits Are Taboo Now Shetland, Tweed Jackets With Dark Slacks Make For A Smart Neatness By MORTON C. JAMWPEL "If I can't wear slacks and dirty white shoes and- crew clips in col- lege, where else can I?" college men have always asked. And the answer has been "no place else." That's why the slack-sport jacket combina- tion has thumbed its nose at the rest of the sartorial world and held its throne securely on every college cam- pus. It all started a long time ago when a daring young man had an odd pair of pants and an odd (in more ways than one) jacket. He had the don't- give-a-darn attitude enough to wear aforementioned otfit in public. Practical college men, who have never been known to have an excess of money, saw quickly that here was a way of making four outfits from two, at no added cost. Definite Trends But shrewd tailors and Michigan men have changed the throw-togeth- er slacks and jacket combination in- to a field of dress that has developed definite principles and trends of its own. In fact, the development was so great that the only thing new about slacks and jackets for this fall is that there won't be, there just can't be, anything new. Everything new has been done. We can, however, note what has become passe, and that will remain from that very varied field as smart dress for this year. The first thing to cross from your wardrobe list is the idea of still throwing together odd pants and jackets. Slacks and sportscoats, yes. But pants and jackets, no. Of course, if you have trousers from a grey flannel or a covert cloth suit that you want to sneak under a snazzy sport coat, why nobody has to know they are not slacks. But forget about wearing the trousers of that blue evening suit with a camel hair coat. Loud Plaid Out Second "cross out" item is the loud -plaid and checked jacket that herald- ed the arrival of sport coats, but which also heralded its own demise several years ago. Third thing to forget is the idea of paying forty or fifty dollars, for a sport jacket. If you have the money and want to part with it, why go to it, comrade. But thanks to Ameri- can mass production and the huge college clothing market, it is no longer necessary to shell out fifty dollars to buy a genuine camel hair jacket. In fact it is no longer neces- sary to pay for a genuine camel hair jacket. The industry has- succeeded in producing so many varieties of really fine imitations and substitutes for the genuine camel hair, that you certainly gain nothing sartorially (or financially) by going to the expense of buying the real thing. Prices for these "ersatz" jackets begin so low it is really silly to talk about it. Other Combinations Other topnotch afternoon jackets will be thick tweeds and shetlands, which came into style circles two years ago, and for some unknown reason failed to achieve their due fame. These jackets are the one and only type that may be as heavy in cloth and as loud in style and color as you care to have them. This ob- server has seen heavy-cloth tweeds in unbelievably loud ptterns, that made an outfit consisting of dark slacks, white shirt and dark tie look exceptionally smart. Note that for fall wear. The usual run of three-button. saddle-back coats will return in every cloth and every color, but please, oh please, if only for our personal peace of mind, steer clear of those pastel- colored affairs that some malicious manufacturer perpetrated on un- suspecting haberdasheries. We know Michigan men are too sartorially shrewd to go in for such clothing but the sheer brilliance of these insipid garments have been known to hyp- notize students into buying them. Slacks Situation The slacks situation is not very different from sports jackets. Tweeds, covert, gabardine, and flannel are the byword, but a word of advice. The keynote these days to smart afternoon sportsdwear is no longer loudness. The days of the blazer went out with near beer. A smart neatness is the thing this year. And in a sportwear ensemble, slacks more than any other item of dress can turn the trick. Let your jackets blaze: let tIem *be light and loud or both. But whether your jacket is green or yellow or grey, keep your slacks dark in color and pressed at the knees. Not even for early fall do we sanction light trousers. Natural covert is the lightest we will accept and genuine covert is not really very light in color. Chief reason for this dogma is the extremely effective contrast 'dark slacks will afford your outfit. Height- en this effect with light, preferably white, shirt and dark tie. I Students. to the tune of '4 The Traditional Michigan Song s AE sI I ~o pbahAnArbofrfo i toe sand O 1e o f the 1~Q1~ o? h retelt Bach to g ac to Tow"' cign g°lbar nArbor iwant t o a n o 1 g tt go bacthQ OAG mh ~oth'er an .father payfa"e bifl we 11alcith die li o he ndweh of Collegeje e e g t t o l ote to tell w etat ae coin we spe Itat t ith te dea 0id 1. j ; -1 , r f s i K , -"". ..o.. ,. 4 4.4 4. I STUDENTS! LET'S BRING our clothes to The Traditional Michigan Cleaner 8 'AD, lE E N E S WIcro clean UNDER THE MICROSCOPE Ann Arbor's Foremost Cleaner KNITS BLOCKED to measurements PROMPT SERVICE on Short" Notie - _ _ _- --- _ _ _ - _ _