Motion Picture (Feb-Jul 1938)

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ARE THE GIRLS S KNOWN IN MOVIEDOM AS "THE SCHOOL FOR STARS." T •*£ HERE seems to be a story about tbe visiting I man. . . . He wanted, of i to see the Btudii so, because he had a letter from a Large Detonation i glish for "Big Shot") abroad, he was taken well in hand by Hollywood press agents, to be shown around. So, the first morning, they took him to this studio, and that stu and along about noon, they drove out Sunset Boulevard toward Culver City, to show him more studios. But at the corner of Sunset and Highland avenue, our Visiting Englishman suddenly took command. They approached a large structure on that corner. Outside ores of \o\ §& luscious, leggy damsels. Along a curbing — the I ^B glishman insists it was a "kerb" — sat a row of the ^B gals, and what gals! The Englishman needed a ^B lutely no imagination to be aware of the fact that ^B American girls have lovely — ah — uh — legs. It ^B was obvious, even to him, \ To one side was a large court. I)> < iris ^B were on it — playing tennis, or handball. ^B wore shorts — very short. And si And ^B plainly nothing else save brilliant make ^B The Englishman chortled and screwed his ^| monocle firmly into his eye, and In staring. A look of perplexity crossed his face. Finally, he turned to his escort: "I sye," he said, "wheah ^B is the camera?" ^B "What camera?" asked the ^B press-agent guide. ^B "The cinemah cam< ^B plied the Englishman ^B what steeu-jo is this, may ^ I awsk ?" Hollywood High School could give the New Ycrk stage a good race as a stepping-stone to the screen. One of the first of the school's graduates to make a name for herself is Fay Wray (t o p). Immediately above are Muriel Evans, June Lang. At the left is Cecilia Parker. At the right is June Knight. Hollywood High girls, who make the movies, have good looks and figures