Dress Code

<p>Our school is okay with the dress code...but I never understood why girls couldn't wear tank tops...especially April-June when it starts to get really warm.</p>

<p>Other than that, nothing really comes to mind except for the pregnant girls in their clothes...which was interesting.</p>

<p>Maternity ward suits...what is school that does not allow tight clothing supposed to do with those, which are designed to be tight fits? Ban them from school for 9 months?</p>

<p>All I am saying is that some girls should realize that the clothes they were able to wear before pregnancy aren't a real option at 7 months along...</p>

<p>You are saying that the pregnant girls are wearing tight-fitting tank tops? That would be appealing to us males...but the large belly would definitely put many in check.</p>

<p>The pregnant look is a little appealing to you? :p</p>

<p>I don't know...I remember seeing this one girl at my school who was pregnant and very short, she reminded me of a pregnant smurf.</p>

<p>My dress code is khakis, shirt, and tie from September to mid-October and April-May, and khakis, shirt, tie, and a blazer from Mid-October through March. It's not bad, you get used to it, and we get free dress days often enough. We're an all guys school, so nobody really cares what anyone wears.</p>

<p>The perks of a dress code are that you don't have have to worry about what you wear and you don't have to own as many clothes. I've been wearing a uniform/dress wear for 12 years now. The only problem, well, it's not really a problem, is that I have to buy a bunch of clothes to wear in college now. One pair of jeans isn't going to cut it for the next four years.</p>

<p>No, actually quite the opposite. I like them thin and short to midsize, of any race, but I prefer something nonwhite.</p>

<p>does exeter have a dress code?</p>

<p>Wow. All guys and a dress code? That's horrible.</p>

<p>Pregnant girls here can wear whatever the heck they want-- who's gonna tell an expectant 16-year old mother to dress like a prude?</p>

<p>"The perks of a dress code are that you don't have have to worry about what you wear and you don't have to own as many clothes."</p>

<p>wait... why does dress code mean that you own less clothes?? do you not go out? do you where your uniform all day... For most kids I would say that uniforms would mean more clothes b/c they would have to buy uniforms on top of their everyday clothes....</p>

<p>I didn't say dress like a prude...I am just saying dress with some dignity.</p>

<p>I know- it just sounded more ironic my way. :D</p>

<p>Martha is obviously in a public school...and then again, what kind of 16-year old preggo is going to be a prude? After all, they surely had the audacity to have sex in the first place with a mere boyfriend.</p>

<p>
[quote]
wait... why does dress code mean that you own less clothes?? do you not go out? do you where your uniform all day... For most kids I would say that uniforms would mean more clothes b/c they would have to buy uniforms on top of their everyday clothes....

[/quote]

The clothes I wear around my house are not the type of clothes I'd wear to school all the time if I didn't have a dress code. The type of clothes I'd wear to school would be the clothes that I currently wear when I hang out with my friends on the weekends (jeans, decent shirts). Since I don't have to wear those every day, I don't have to own as many. With my uniform, I only have three pairs of pants and about five shirts that I cycle all week, something I'd not be inclined to do with non-uniform clothes since I'm a little picky about what I wear when I have a choice.</p>

<p>Besides, in the spring/summer/early fall, they are really hot and can wear skimpier clothes to cool off and be a bit more comfortable.</p>

<p>Do you have the luxury of living in the mountains or do you live inland?</p>

<p>Inland.</p>

<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fayette_County,_Alabama%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fayette_County,_Alabama&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>kman scares me.</p>

<p>really? why?</p>