Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 13, 1933, Page 2, Image 2

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    University of Oregon, Eugene
Sterling Green, Editor Grant Thuemmel, Manager
Joseph Saslavsky, Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Doug Polivka. Associate Editor; Julian Prescott. Guy Shadduck,
Parks Hitchcock, Francis Pallister, Stanley Kobe....
UPPFP NEWS STAFF
Don Caswell, News Ed.
Malcolm Bauer. Sports Ed.
Elinor Henry, Features Ed.
Bob Moore. Makeup Ed.
Cynthia Liljeqvist, Women’s Ed,
A1 Newton. Dramatic* Ed.
Mary Louiee Edinger, Society
Ed.
Barney Clark. Humor Ed.
J'eggy Chessman. Literary Ed.
Patsy Lee. Fashions Ed.
George Callas. Radio Ed.
DAY EDITORS: Rill Phipps. Paul Ewing, Mary Jane Jenkins,
Hazle Corrigan, Byron Brinton.
EXpCL’JI VE REPORTERS: Betty Ohlemillcr, Ann Rccd
Burns, Roberta» Aloody.
FEATURE WRITERS: Ruth McClain, Hcnriette Ilorak.
REPORTERS: Frances Hardy. Rose Hitnelstein, Margaret
Brown., Winston Allard. Stanley Bromberg, Clifford Thomas,
Newton Stearns. Carl Jones. Helen Dodds, Hilda Gillam.
Thomas Ward, Miriam Eichner. David Lowry, Marian John
son. Eleanor Aldrich, Howard Kessler.
SPORTS STAFF: Bob Avison. Assistant Sports Ed.; Jack Mil
ler. Clair Johnson, George Jones. Julius Scruggs, Edwin
Pooley, Bob Avison. 'Dan Clark, 'fed Blank. Art Derbyshire,
Emerson Stickles. Jim Quinn, Don Olds, Betty Shoemaker,
Tom Dimmick, Don Brooke.
COPYREAPEKS: Elaine Cornish. Ruth Weber. Dorothy Dill,
Pearl Johansen. Marie Pell, Corinne LaBarre, Phyllis Adams,
Margery Kissling, Maluta Read, Mildred Blackburne, George
Bikman, Milton Pillctte. Helen Green, Virginia Endicott.
Adelaide Hughes, Mabel Finchum, Marge Leonard, Barbara
Smith.
WOMEN’S PAGE ASSISTANTS: Janis Worley, Betty Labbe,
Mary Graham, Joan Stadelman, Bette Church, Marge Leon
ard. Catherine Eisman.
NIGHT EDITORS: Fred Bronn, Ruth Vannice, Alfredo Fajar
do. David Kiehle, George Jones, Abe Merritt, Bob Parker.
ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Eleanor Aldrich, Henryelta
Mummey, Virginia Catherwood, Margilie Morse, Jane Bishop,
Doris Bailey, Marjorie Scobert, Irma Egbert, Nan Smith.
Gertrude von Berthelsdorf. Jean Mahoney, Virginia Scoville.
RADIO STAFF: Barney Clark, Howard Kessler, Cynthia Cor
nell.
SECRETARY: Mary Graham.
BUSINESS STAFF
William Meissner. Adv. Merr. i Rill Pprrv CAT err
Fred Fisher, Asst. Adv. Mgr.
Ed Labbe, Asst. Adv. Mgr.
William Temple, Asst. Adv.
Mgr.
Eldon Haber man, Nat. Adv.
Mgr.
Ron Rew, Promotional Mgr.
Tom Holman, Circ. Mgr.
Betty Hentley, Office Mgr.
Pearl Murphy, Class. Adv. Mgr.
Willa Bitz, Checking Mgr.
Ruth Kippcy, Checking Mgr.
Jeanette Thompson, Exec. Sec.
Phyllis Cousins, Exec. Sec.
Dorothy Anne Clark, Exec. Sec.
OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Gretchen Gregg, Jean Pinney, Gail
Huffofd, Marjorie Will, Evelyn Davis, Charlotte Olitt, Vir
ginia Hammond, Carmen Curry, Alene Walker, Theda
Spicer, June Sexsmith, Margaret Shively, Dorothy Hagge,
J’eggy Hayward, Laurabelle Quick, Martha McCall. Doris
Ostand, Vivian Wherrie, Dorothy McCall, Cynthia Cornell,
Marjorie Scohert, Mary Jane Moore. Margaret Ball.
ADVERTISING SALESMEN: Woodie Everitt, Don Chap
man, Frank Howland, Bernadine I'ranzen, Margaret Chase,
Bob Parker, Leonard Jacobson, Dave Silven, Conrad Dilling,
Ross Congleton, Hague Callister, Cy Cook, Harry Ragsdale,
Dick Cole, Ben Chandler, Bob Cresswell, Bill Mclnturff,
Helene Ries, Vernon Buegler, Jack McGiriv Melvin Erwin,
Jack Lew, Howard Bennett. Wallace McGregor. Jerry
Thomas. Margaret Thompson, Andy Anderson. Tom Meador.
> The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the
University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the college
year, , except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, examination periods,
all of December and all of March except the first three days.
Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class'
matter. Subscription rates, $2.5b a year.
A member of the Major College Publications, represented by
A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City; 123 W.
Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1206 Maple Avc.,
Los Angeles; ('all Building, San Francisco.
A NEW CONSTITUTION
\ THREATENED squabble over unfair tactics
at the freshman election Wednesday has for
tunately been averted, but the incident serves to
point out one of the glaring faults of the A. S.
U. O. constitution: There are no regulations to pre
vent the type of chicanery lhat was alleged to have
taken place, and no punishment is provided for cor
rupt election practices.
The Emerald has pointed out before that the
vice-president of the student body was wasting his
breath when he announced previous to the election
that any stuffing of the ballot box would mean the
disqualification of the candidate whose backers
committed the offense. He would have had no con
stitutional authority to take this step.
This is but one of many weak spots in the con
stitution. The faults come to light infrequently, on
such occasions as the Wednesday election. It is to
be the task of the new constitutional revision com
mittee to ferret out these defects and repair them
an enormous task for any group of 10 or 20 stu
dents. The committee’s work will be faulty and
incomplete unless every interested person on the
campus gives willingly of his ideas and suggestions
on the subject.
Now is the time to make election irregularities
a thing of the past; it is the time to put teeth in
all the regulatory provisions of the constitution;
now is the time to make student self-government
an actuality, instead of a mere name. The Emerald
offers its columns as a foium for discussion on the
new constitution. Suggestions are solicited; every
student who has in mind a provision that would
improve any section of the present out-of-date docu
ment is invited to send it in. Many of the sug
gestions will be published, in the hope that they
stir other students to a consideration of the prob
lems of student government. Every suggestion,
published or not, will be referred to the revision
committee. Out of it all, there should arise an A.
S. U. O. constitution that will give student govern
ment a new lease on life.
THE SETTING FOR, ANOTHER WAR
rT"'0 cap their triumph over the Central Powers
in 1918 the Allies imposed the Treaty of Ver
sailles on a war-weary but ever gullible world. In
.1933 there are few who are not willing to concede
that the Treaty of Versailles may have some flaws.
Europe had its friction points in 1914. Ami Eu
rope has its friction points in 1933. Before 1914
attention was focused on the Balkans. Today our
eyes are directed toward the Pomorze (Polish Cor
ridor) and Austria.
Back in the eighteenth century Frederick the
Great of Prussia came to the conclusion that East
and West Prussia should not be separated. Accord
ingly, Prussia's share of the first partition of Poland
was the Pomorze. Now Frederick could travel from
West Prussia to East Prussia without quitting
Prussian soil:
By 1919 the Polish population of the Pomorze
was still in the majority, but the German minority
was not insignificant. At. this juncture the Allies
decided to discover what Poland looked like in 1775
and re-created that hapless state. Besides ante
dating European maps previous to 1919 the Pomorze
has beedme a delicate factor in European politics.
For East and West Prussia are now divided.
Modern German state .ren are just as determined
as was Frederick the Great that the Pomorze must
be in Teutonic hands. Resurrected Poland is just
as determined that the Pomorze remain a portion
of the Polish republic. Poland’s ally, France, is
also wedded to the status quo, and would no doubt
resent German action aimed to regain the coveted
strip of ground.
The Polish corridor is a breeder of war. Ger
many eventually will tilt with Poland for its pos
session. First Germany must find an ally. And
allies are not hard to find in jealous, suspicious
Europe. Meanwhile German trains must cross th3
Polish corridor, and amateur Polish artists amuse
themselves by drawing uncomplimentary pictures
of Hitler on the boxcars.
COMPULSORY “ACTIVITIES”
orrvHE greater number of those underclass
women who attended did so under compul
sion—the Y. W. C. A. was regarded as a stepping
stone to campus ‘activities,’ and houses gave ‘ac
tivity points’ for participation in Y. W. C. A. ac
tivities.”—from Wednesday’s Emerald.
Was it because the activities referred to above
had so little to offer that the majority of partici
pants had to be forced or bribed to take part? Or
was it because of a lethargy on the part of under
class women that they had to be induced to enter
into the activities?
When cognizance is taken of the enthusiasm,
freshman women put into such things as class elec
tions and some other activities, the last idea is [
abandoned. If it is the first, why are the first and
second year women, who have plenty to do in cur
ricular activities, led into such outside distractions?
The answer is found in the activity-point sys
tem. It seems that practically all of the women’s
Greek letter organizations have as a prerequisite
to initiation certain achievements in academic, so
cial and extra-curricular lines and to meet these
qualifications the pledges have to devote so much
lime to some activity.
It makes no difference whether the activity
gives to the participant anything in return for the
effort expended. She must do her bit for one term.
After that little is cared whether she carries on.
That is, unless the house has political ambitions
for her. If so, she is urged to keep on the job that
she may in her senior year bring credit to the house
by being a “big shot” on the campus.
Such a system is valueless and can even be
harmful. It belongs to a day that has passed, and
has no place on the campus of a modern university.
As one of our favorite professors would say, “it is
very vicious, very vicious."
On Other Campuses
Prodigies us Politicians
'T'HE University of Wisconsin will begin this fall
a novel experiment in education provided it can
find 10 prodigies of learning.
Through a tutorial method, the university ex
pects to train a few extraordinarily brilliant stu
dents for intelligent public leade.ship. The name
of the new course is “classical humanities,” and it
will comprise an exhaustive four-year study of
Greek and Roman civilization. In addition to being
precocious intellectual giants, prodigies eligible for
the course must have had four years of Latin in
high school.
Viewed realistically, this effort to educate stu
dents for politics is one of the most nonsensical
ever projected by pedagogs. Just how a four-year
study of Greek and Roman civilization will fit the
prodigies for leadership in the maelstrom of Ameri
can government will be beyond the ken of most
people, even the most visionary.
The Wisconsin professors have made the mis
take of confusing the means, and a comparatively
insignificant means, for the end. A knowledge of
Greek and Roman civilization offers ^ ,,/d back
ground for an attack on present-dny problems, but
to subject a group of prodigies to four years of
study of classical history is silly. They could learn
all they need from Greece and Rome in a few weeks
of study, and for practical purposes this would not
include learning those two difficult ancient lan
guages.
It will be a safe bet that in four years the Amer
ican people will not look to the 10 Wisconsin-trained
prodigies to lead them out of whatever morasses
they may be in. Oklahoma Daily.
Innocent Bystander
By BAKNKY CLARK
rT'HE freshmen this year are u
•*- very bright and ambitious
crop. Witness the high-powered
election just terminated. Airplanes
fireworks, auto parades, every
thing but Hose Festival floats, and
we don’t know why they over
looked that. Just good clean fun:
However, some nasty-minded
gentleman comes in with the sad
tale of the 1*1 K. A. fresh Mho
walked in und wanted to vote,
only to l>e told that they were
just fresh out of Imllots, and
wasn't that too had. Other peo
ple point to the election hoard
und raise their eyebrows in a
sinister manner.
The same nasty-minded gentle
man is responsible for the report
that the ballot-boxes were put in
a Hammond cat and carted up t<
the Igloo to be counted, weighing
j ten pounds more ut the end of the
! ride tlian at. the start. Atmos
jpherie conditions, maybe!
The sanctimonious l*ht Dolts
wore all evoltect the other I*. M.
to discover that their prize
group of pledges, ai| twenty of
'em, had eloped with the Alpha
l*hi anti (lamina l’ht frosh and
disappeared with great com
pleteness. The brothers did some
high-class Sherloeking, lint it
wasn't until the next morning
that they discovered that they
had been right next door all eve
ning, in the < raftsmen's club.
Such a business!
Two of lhe cute little pledge.-,
Dick Decvers and Chuck Heltzel.
didn't show up until DdSO the next
A M They claimed '.hat they
had ipent the night at the !t. ii.
c. a. vve assume mat mere is
no connection between this story
and the resignation the same
morning of three members of the
Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet. Anyway,
Diek and Chuck took 150 apiece
under the shower, and 150 is out
in any man's language.
* * *
The report that Bessie Corri
gan's silver spittoon had been
found in the Chi O laundry chute
has at last been proven unfounded.
A base canard, say they!
A startling news flash from
College Side informs us that
MleUex Vail has changed his
name to Cynthia Dale. At least,
Mrs. Smith reports that that's
the way phone ealls intended
for him come in. Them's fightin'
words, stranger!
OGDEN GNASHES
Says Ike Donin—
“I'll never data
Ganuna Flii Beta!”
Mho’s afraid of the big, bat!
w olf!
Ask Crystal Ball • - - - By STANLEY ROBE
WASHINGTON
OREGON)
The New Germany
By RICHARD NEUBERGER
Editor’s Note: Few magazine articles in
recent years have aroused as much interest
and dissension oh the campus, as this descrip
tion in the current issue of The Nation of
Nazi anti-semitic atrocities. The author was
editor of the Emerald last year, and traveled
through Europe during the summer. He is
the first Oregon student to write for the lib
eral weekly and one of its youngest contrib
utors. It is reprinted by permission of The
Nation; because of its length, the article will
be divided into four installments. It is copy
righted, 1933, by The Nation, Inc.
44 r'kAILY publications fan the fire
” of hatred and bitterness. In
Nurnberg a notorious Jew-baiter,
named Julius Streicher publishes
Der Sturmer, a newspaper devoted
entirely to anti-Semitic propagan
da. Every Jew who achieves prom
inence, among them such Ameri>
cans as Governor Lehman of New
York and Samuel Untermeyer, is
denounced as a murderer and a
criminal. Across the bottom of
the paper each day is written in
black inch-high type: “Die Juden
sind unser Ungluck! (The Jews
are our misfortune.) Frequent bul
letins from Goebbel’s office put
more kindling on the funeral pyre
of culture and tolerance.
"Much else that I saw in the
‘new Germany’ further substan
tiates the conclusion that those
who believe in liberty are finished
in Hitler’s Reich. Jewish mer
chants, professional men, and hum
ble workers and their families are
facing slow starvation. Jewish
children live in an atmosphere they
cannot understand, in which they
are persecuted by their school
mates. Jewish families are afraid
to venture on the streets; they
have no protection, no rights. Jews
are barred in many towns from
the public swimming pools. Jew
ish athletes can belong to no sports
clubs, which makes the German
efforts to retain the 1936 games
in Berlin on the ground that there
will be no discrimination, one more
piece of hypocrisy. Socially and
economically, as well as political
ly, the Jews have been ruined.
Those who have not suffered physi
cal violence are experiencing men
tal torture almost as severe.
“The fate of those who spon
sored the cause of the masses has
been equally terrible. Labor-un
ion officials, socialists, and liber
als have been murdered and their
homes plundered. Under the guise
of saving Germany from the com
munists, Hitler has crushed ruth
lessly all ‘left’ tendencies. He pos
es as the savior of the laboring
man, but the staunchest advocates
of workers’ rights have suffered
most at his hands. Thus we see
the new Germany’ as a land in
which a racial and religious min
ority has been sacrificed on the
altar of political expediency and
intolerance, in which democracy
and civil rights have been abol
ished, from which culture and in
dependent thought have been ex
pelled, which is preparing its chil
dren to be cannon fodder on the
battlefields of a future war.
’ But ruthless and relentless as
Hitler and his lieutenants are.
there is one weapon they fear.
The Nazi mayor of a large Ger
man city told me his party dread
ed economic pressure. At pistol
point the storm troopers have
forced their victims to deny all
stor-ieu of atrocities in an attempt
to lessen the indignation abroad.
They realize a tight international
boycott can kill even the monster
they have created. A boycott
which shuts out German merchan
dise. reduces the passenger lists of
German liners, and keeps tourists
out of German', . an ; con ’ rite an
end to the most gruesome chapter
of modern history by dethroning
Hitler and Hitlerism.
"This is not alone the battle of
the Jews—I saw intellectuals, lib
erals, pacifists, Social Democrats,
almost as badly off. It is the fight
of everyone who believes in per
sonal liberty and civil rights, a
fight for the principles on which
America was founded. For that
reason it is depressing on return
ing to the free and wholesome air
of America to find such a concern
as R. H. Macy and Company, chief
ly owned and operated by Jews,
purchasing merchandise in Ger
many—because it is cheaper. One
of the store’s principal owners is
Jesse I. Strains, American ambas
sador to France, who ardently
voiced his belief in democratic
ideals in an Independence day ad
dress in Paris. Actions speak
louder than words, however. The
Strauses might better follow the
example of their Christian com
petitor, Lord and Taylor, which
recalled its buyers from Germany
shortly after Hitler inaugurated
his reign of terror, and regardless
of price established the policy of
not buying one pfennig’s worth of
Nazi goods.
(The End)
Reading
-and
Writing
PEGGY CHESSMAN, Editor
IF you are in doubt about what to
* read or just which books are
really good, by all means consult
this list of the 40 most notable
American books of 1932. They
were selected by the American Li
brary association, following the
final ballots of distinguished li
brarians, literary critics, and uni
versity professors,
i Here they are:
Biography
“Earth Horizon," Mary Hunter
Austin.
“Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes,”
Silas Bent.
“Beveridge and the Progressive
Era,” Claude Bowers.
“The Life of Emerson,'' Van
Wyck Brooks.
"The Story of My Life,” Clar
ence Seward Darrow.
“Mark Twain’s America,” Ber
nard De Voto.
"Sherman: Fighting Prophet,"
Lloyd Lewis.
“Grover Cleveland," Allan Nev
ins.
"An Autobiography," F r a n k
Lloyd Wright.
Science
"Nonsuch Land of Water,” Wil
liam Beebe.
"Thrills of a Naturalist's Quest,"
Raymond Lee Ditmars.
"Man and Metals." Thomas Rick
ard.
Law
“Convicting the Innocent," Bor
chard and Lutz.
"Society of Nation," Felix Mor
ley.
Economic and Social Problems
“Modern Corporation and Pri
vate Property,” Berle and Means.
“Farewell to Reform,” John
Chamberlain.
“A New Deal,” Stuart Chase.
“Bolshevism, Fascism, and Cap
italism,” George S. Counts.
“Rethinking Missions.”
“War Debts and World Pros
perity,” Harold Moulton and Leo
Pasvolsky.
“Economic Tendencies in the
United States,” Frederick Mills.
“The Power Fight," Hilman
Raushenbush.
“Recent Social Trends.”
“A Planned Society,” George
Soule.
Political Science
"Interpretations 1931 - 1932,”
Walter Lippmann.
"Can America Stay at Home?”
Frank Herbert Simonds.
Belles Lettres and Arts
“Horizons,” Norman Bel Geddes.
“Roman Way,” Edith Hamilton.
There Is A
COMPLETE STOCK
of
ARROW SHIRTS
lu Young Men's Styles
ERIC MERRELL
CLOTHES FOR MEN
VARSITY
SERVICE STATION
G REAS 1N G—01 LIN U
and
WASHING
loth and Hilyard
■
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i
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BEAT ’EM, OREGON!
ENJOY YOrii THU’ TO THE GAME
- with
Walora Candies!
851 East 13th Street
HAVE YOU TRIED OUR FUDGE BARS?
I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■: KJ
“Expression in America,” Lud- j
wig Lewisohn.
“Conquistador," Archibald Mac- (
Leish.
“The Stage is Set," Lee Simon
son.
“Collected Poems," Elinor Wy- j
lie.
Travel and Social Customs
"Ozark Mountain Folks," Vance
Randolph.
“The Germans,” George Shus- i
ter.
“Van Loon’s Geography,” Hen
drik Willem Van Loon.
History
“March of Democracy," James .
Truslow Adams.
“Manchuria," Owen Lattimore. ;
Fiction
“1919,” John Dos Passos.
“God’s Angry Man,” Leonard
Ehrlich.
“Mutiny on the Bounty,” Charles
Nordhoff and James Norman Hall.
All but three of the books in
this group are available at the old
libe. Many are in the Co-op col
lection.
Emerald
of the Air
EMERALD OF THE AIR .
Which of these two great ques
tions are you pondering over?
1. To read or not to read.
2. What to read ? What to
read?
Solve these immense problems
by sending for our free booklet,
or better yet, tune in on KORE
at 4:30 today and be enlightened
on the matter of what book to
read next. Peggy Chessman, lit
erary editor, will criticize latest
scriblings for 15 minutes via afore
mentioned radio station.
Mannequin
By PATSY LEE
I^ORDUROY has passed through
the mediocre stage of being
just a song, undecorative mate
rial which had no earthly good for
anything except upperclassmen’s
trousers. Today, we find corduroy,
both silk and cotton, fashioned in
to the most lovely garments!
This stiff, ribbed material was
one of the most expensive and
elaborate fabrics at one time. In
fact, the original name was “core
du roi", or material of the king.
After centuries of complete negli
gence, it is now returning to the
realm to which it rightfully be
longs.
Irene B. Bury of Hollywood has
designed the most intriguing loung
ing pajamas in this fabric of kings.
The colors—oh, the colors—are so
harmonious that anyone would
melt before them. While brows
ing through McMorran’s yester
day I happened onto an entire
section given over to corduroy.
These mannish-looking pajamas
have huge wooden buckles and but
tons for the sole decorations. A
brown and cream pair with wide
stripes running horizontally across
the shoulders just shrieked smart
ness and complete comfort.
As long as I am on the subject
(Continued on Page Three)
The Safety Valve
An Outlet for Campus Steam
All communications are to be addressed
to The Editor, Oregon Daily Emerald,
and should not exceed 200 words in
length. Letters must be signed, but
should the writer prefer, only initials
will be used. The editor maintains the
right to withhold publication should he
see fit.
To the Editor:
The letters of Goodnough and
Brimlow regarding Neuberger’s
treatment of the Hitler fascist re
gime as he encountered it during
his recent travels, I feel should
not go unanswered. Apparently
Goodnough and Brimlow are of
the sort who desiccate simple
realities until in place of the reali
ties they have a collection of phil
osophical bric-a-brac.
How can the documented testi
monies of Neuberger be tossed
away as rubbish on the basis that
some frustrated woman back in
the nineteenth century grew hys
terical over the degradation of
race here in the United States and
emotionalized on the glaring facts;
or because a certain British poet
told his readers that they must
either enjoy or be bored by his
writings ?
Goodnough and Brimlow’s criti
cism is irritating but simply ir
relevant to the material presented
by Neuberger. Neuberger saw
things and wrote down what he
saw. He talked to people, not to
press agents. He tramped through
Germany; he didn’t ride the rub
ber-neck wagon. He wanted to
find out what was going on
amongst the people, not to be lec
tured at by museum guards. He
went there to witness actuality,
not to be “cultured.”
The data which Neuberger col
lected he has written down. If
some hypersensitive souls can read
what Neuberger has composed and
realize that the experiences re
| lated were encountered man-to
man, and that those scenes de
scribed could be multiplied many
fold from every hamlet, by-road,
city, and section of Nazi Germany
today; and that moreover, the
amenities which the delirious ones
conjure up to lave their tender
fancies, exist as fragments of
broken minds and broken wisdom
—if Goodnough and Brimlow
would deal with these realities as
realities instead of worrying about
hypotheses they might discover
something really tangible with
which to occupy their contempla
tion.
Respectfully yours,
RICHARD ELLIOTT BOLLING
The Emerald
Greets —
i
JOHN (JACK) HITCHCOCK
Who says he doesn't want to be
a journalist because brother Parks
. . . etc., etc.
GEORGE JETTE
Whose girl over at Hendricks
tells us he is going to be a great
landscape architect. Good land,
George!
JULIA LABARRE
DOROTHY ROBERTS
HELEN SHIVE
This shirt knows
your body
When you put on Arrow's new form-fitting Mitoga
-you'll swear it was made only for you! It drapes
in at the waist, eliminating those old-time blouse
effects. It conforms to your shoulders ... tapers
with the arms. The Mitoga is made possible, first,
by Arrow's skilled tailoring, second, by Arrow's
own Sanforizing process which sees to it that the
Mitoga keeps its perfect fit through a lifetime of
launderings. The Mitoga comes in most all Arrow
styles, patterns, and collar versions.
"Follow the Arrow and you follow the style”