The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, July 29, 1947, Image 3

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    TUESDAY, JULY M, IM7
Dress Transition Features
tonger Skirts, Says Specialist
“Longer skirts—which wi.l get longer—are one indication oi a cur.
rent transition period in women’s fashion,” said Miss Doris Myers, vis.
iting professor cf bonne economics from Carnegie Institute of Tech
notogy.
Miss Myers has no consolation to offer “praatioally IQO percent
M the College men” who, according to a recent Summer Collegian ar
ticle, are protesting the lengthen- •
ing-skirt trend.
“Skirts will reach a length of
12 to 14 inches from the floor,”
she predicted. (Three to six
[inches lower that coeds’ skirts
last year.)
More Feminine
Fall skirts will be fuller and
more feminine in contour, ac
cording to Miss Myers, with
pleats, bustles, and other effects
of skirt fullness featured.
Interviewed in the clothing
laboratory, 112 Home Economics,
the instructor had magazine clip
pings handy to illustrate the new
silhouette. She pointed out the
models’ recently popular broad
shoulders, narrow waist, and nar
row skirt. , . .
“Since 1900 the cycle has been
at-the tubular form, recently var
ied by heavily padded shoulders
msVing an inverted triangle ef
fect, flattering to most women’s
figures.
“Cycles usually last about 85
years,” she explained, “but the
wartime regulations on yardage
helped lengthen this cycle.”
Bell Shape Returns
The new cycle being ushered
in will highlight a bell-shaped
silhouette producing a broad tn-
Sloop Speaks
To Workshop
“Christianized education holds
the secret of world peace,” Dr.
Mary Sloop, director of Crossnore
Inc. of Crossnore, N. C., told edu
cators attending the special Penn
sylvania Workshop lecture this
“Whether or not religion, as
such, is taught in our schools,”
Dr. Sloop said, “we must give our
children character as well as edu
cation by teaching them the prin
ciples of ti»e Bible.”
Dr. Sloop explained that she
took up her work in the moun
tains of North Carolina to give an
education to people who “would
have been remarkable if they had
been educated.”
Dr. Sloop attributes her success
in winning over these mountain
people to the surgery that she and
her husband, both medical doc
tors, performed. After they had
been won over to the idea of bet
tering their living conditions, Dr.
Sloop said, these people never
tired of giving any material they
owned or their labor to the young
couple who had come into their
midst to organize a school, a hos
pital, sewing classes, and to lead
them to more wholesome lives.
Ind. Ed. Dames
Tour Campus
Wives of Industrial Education
graduate students will be con
ducted on a campus tour which
will leave from the Student Union
desk, Old Mpin, at 2:30 p.m.
Thursday. The tour will include
Mineral Industries exhibits, Col
lege flower gardens, and the
creamery, said Mrs. Michael
Kovin, chairman.
A dinner dance August 7 will
close the group’s main session
roster. All wives of industrial ed
ucation students are eligible to
attend the club’s meetings and
social affairs, said Mrs. Fred L.
Hoffman, club president.
s t y e ~,
IS. SO I $8.50
tO» TIME (Oa LIFE
Magasl—> Magazine)
SPECIAL COLLEGE RATES)
SIS BBC HALL
***»«»# . . .
«. S. BOTTGER
MSI (Ext. STS)
THE SUMMER
angle with the base at the hem of
the skirt and the point at the
neckline, according to the stylist.
“Shoulders will be rounded,
not padded, giving softer lines.
Acceptance of unpadded should
ers will depend, of course, on the
individual woman’s figure,” Miss
Myers said.
“Although many custom-made
fashions still come from Paris,
the United States is now the lead
er in ready-to-wear styles. The
advantage of living in a demo
cratic society is that our method
of production has made a variety
of fashions available to all wo
men, giving her the emotional
satisfaction of being fashion-wise
and budget-wise,” she concluded.
Four June Graduates Accept
Positions with Alma Mater
Four women who received
bachelor’s degrees at the June
commencement have accepted
positions with their alma mater.
Jean Nelson, who laid down the
WSGA presidency gavel in May
and was Quill Girl, Slipper Girl,
and Mortar Board treasurer dur
ing her senior year, is the new
secretary to the Dean of Women.
JEAN NELSON
Managing editor of the Daily
Collegian and president of Theta
Sigma Phi last year, Lynette
Lundquist is now writing for the
Alumni News.
Barbara Kinley, graduate in
■IAN—STATE COLLEGE,
Coed Mermaid
The White Hall pool, home of
the varsity swim team which
took the Eastern district cham
pionship and placed third nation
ally in the Inter-Collegiate Swim
Telegraphies this Spring, is host
this summer to women seeking
relaxation after warm days in
cI£SS.
Only steel-constructed one of
its kind, the 25 by 17 yard pool
may be used by women students
from 4 to 5:30 p. m. Monday,,
Wednesday, and Friday and from
7 to 9 p. m. Tuesday and Thurs
day.
A physical examination at the
Dispensary and a $2 fee payable
at the Office of the Bursar in Old
Main are entrance requirements.
Pastel "tank” suits and towels
are provided to swimmers who
have access to showers and lock
ers.. A special hair-drying room
is one of White Hall’s facilities.
During plunge hours, record
ed music is played. A lifeguard,
either Miss Marion Whallon, in-
commerce and finance, has ac
cepted a position in the record
er’s office. Alice Friese, who re
ceived her degree in education,,
is working this Summer with the
admissions office.
To a woman, they agree that
being employed by the College
isn’t quite the same as being a
coed. One of the main differences
—“saddle shoes and sweater
days” are gone.
Forum Hears
Carleton Panel
Miss Frederica Carleton, visit
ing professor, will conduct a
panel discussion. "Family Spend
ing Patterns,” with a group of her
students in 110 Home Economics,
4:30 p.m. tomorrow. The public is
invited.
An associate professor of home
economics at Syracuse University,
Miss Carleton has taught “Con
sumer Problems” and “Economic
Problems of the Household” in
the Summer Sessions program.
Dr. Winona L. Morgan, associ
ate professor of home economics,
will lecture on “Responsibility of
the Family of Democratic Living”
August 6, closing a series of home
economics forums on “Homes,
Families, and Home Economics.”
Twenty-eight men, represent
ing 17 counties, are enrolled at
the College in the short course for
training Dairy Herd Improvement
Association supervisors. The
course began on July 23.
Swim to Musi
VARSITY SWIMMER
structor of swimming and coach
of the varsity team, or Miss Pearl
Berlin, graduate assistant in the
School of Physical Education, is
on duty at all time.
Tile lined, the pool has under
water lighting. Below the meter
high diving board the pool
SIP - - COOLING BEVERAGES
EAT - - DELICIOUS FOOD
in a
DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHEk*.
at the
COMPLETELY REMODELED
Hotel Chief Lounge
OPPOSITE THE COURT HOUSE
(Just Oif the Diamond)
in
BELLEFONTE
20 CARATS
cologne
s2.2s—Tax Extra
It’s pare gold translated
into fragrance. Very, very
elegant—and so concen
trated yon use but little at
e time. Other aixea up to
Dana wraps you in an aura
folden elegance
MO CARATS
McLanahan’s
S. ALLEN STREET
; at White Hall
slopes to a depth of 8 feet. The
water is kept at a constant 74 to
76 degree Fahrenheit tempera
ture
All women graduates are ex
pected to be able to swim. Classes
ranging from beginners to ad
vanced swimming and diving are
required of all who pass a phy
sical examination during regular
semesters.
READ THE
COLLEGIAN GAZETTE
r-AT PENN STATE
W]C3)
IL olomal
: : h ';i r r-r: / Av-t.i-
All ROOMS WITH RUNNING WAUP
20 CARATS
Use it with t]
after your bath. It’s heavy
scented with 20 cabat* which
means its fragrance surrounds
you tor hours.
BTATE COLLEGE
PACK THRU
CoafwtaM*
Boow Nl
TrurianU
l y m*e
SI 50
* tax extra