4 THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Tuesday, July 30, 1968 Fads and Fashions Pantsuits flair in fall attire By JOAN JARVIS Journalism Camp Reporter Pantsuits have always been favorite fall outfits. This year the Nehru jacket has given the same old pantsuit a new flare. The high collar and straight seam are the two factors that made the jacket's fame rise. They are usually worn with a turtleneck sweater of a contrasting color and if one is really daring one small string of beads sets off the sweater quite well. The slacks should be either tapered or stovepipe to give the Nehru jacket its best effect. —Kansan Photo by Jan Maxwell Two of the more noted wearers of the Nehru coats are Johnny Carson and George Hamilton. Carson introduced the coats one evening on his show. Other celebrities picked up the fad and now the jackets have become quite popular with all sorts of people. Plain colors seem to be better than patterns for the Nehru coats. Some coats have their edges trimmed in a different type of material which accents both coat and pants. Wallace on sports Tiny Tim loves LA; casualty rate is up By DON WALLACE Journalism Camp Reporter Tiny Tim has said he loves the Los Angeles Dodgers and Rosie Grier has announced he will not play professional football anymore. The connection? There may not be one, but the reports are Grier is going to play guitar on television. The 6'5", 287-pound tackle cannot be anything on the guitar like Tiny is on the ukelele . . . ? A-school hopes less troubles than J-school in opening THINGS WERE FAR from "normal" when the Board of Regents authorized the William Allen White School in 1944, shortly after the death of the great Emporia editor. That year saw the greatest battles of World War II, KU had The School of Architecture and Urban Design was born on July 1. Its birth and babyhood are expected to be much simpler than those of KU's 10th school - the William Allen White School of Journalism. New Dean Charles H. Kahn arrives from North Carolina State University to find nearly 400 students in architecture, which was part of the School of Engineering for more than six decades. True, journalism had been taught continually at KU since 1903. And it had had department status since 1911 in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. fewer than 2,000 civilian students, most of them women. There were but a handful of journalism majors. For four years the "School" of Journalism continued to function as a department in the College with no change in graduation requirements. Recently the casualy reports of the American and National football league training camps have made the ones from the Vietnam camp look pale in comparison. At your newsstand NOW JOAN BAEZ plus A LARGER ROLE FOR THE SMALL COLLEGE Among other things the president of Sarah Lawrence says, good-bye to dormitory living. THE NEW RACIALISM by Daniel P. Moynihan Who gets hurt by the quota system? When you want to -kansas BOOKSTORE union SELL YOUR BOOKS! Bring them to the lower level entrance of the BOOKSTORE August 1 & 2 8:30 to 4:30; Monday through Friday Now paying patronage refunds for Period 42-valid through Dec.68 Period 43-valid through June 69