THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1941- THE BATTALION Page 3 * •. r , ^ 4 ‘ rt • r> ^ \ I i j ' ? i » r -> King Anderson Has Worked Way In A&M as Waiter Has Been President Of Agronomy Society For ’41 As Well as King The parents of James Thomas Anderson had little idea 21 years ago that their son would see the day when he would be a king. Per haps they, as all mothers and fathers, had joked about their son some day becoming president, but the thought of regalty had never entered their minds. Yet tomorrow night J. T. Ander son will be the center of a royal Student Publications Royal Contribution J. T. Anderson coronation when he shall be crown ed King of the Land of Cotton. Anderson is second in command of K Infantry and is an agronomy major. Last year he was Junior Business Manager for the Cotton Ball and was elected president of We specialize in fresh Spring chicken dinners. Also sandwiches and a la carte. . We can please the most fastidious of palates. . . NEW YORK CAFE Bryan With Stetson You Win in a Breeze! Here’s an eye-opener in straw hat styling— The new Stetson straws are different in shapes, the new open-weave con struction makes them cool and comfortable on any shape head. From the soft creams to the darker brown shades they’ll keep you walking in a breeze all your own. $3.50 to $5.00 Imperial Straws by Hopkins $1.95, $2.50 to $3.95 7 t T WIMBERLEY STONE DANSBY W 7X7 CLOCKIERS College and Bryan MUSICAL MEANDERINGS j|| Hk' I By Murray Evans When a bass man is put on the front line of a band, then he has something on the ball that is far above ordinary. Those who saw suave, affable Duke Ellington and crew go through their paces here saw the best bassist in the orches tra game today—sepian or other wise. Jimmie Blanton is the name, and he is from Chattanooga, Tennessee. He has been with Ellington only a year and a half, but has been a musician for fifteen years, seven of those majoring on violin. Jimmy plays a flashy type of bass with a distinctly original style and has the best ingrained know ledge of chords this writer has ev er seen. His fret hand moves al most too fast to see over the bass fingerboard. Those who heard him were amazed at his ability to take solos, and also at his ‘triple slap’ lick which put so much punch into the rhythm section. Not only Blanton, but every man in Ellington’s organization is a finished artist. It’s odd, for in stance, to see a brass man double on a stringed instrument, but it was no trick at all for the second trumpet to lay his horn aside and take a sweet violin chorus the way sweet violin choruses were fore ordained to sound. Then there are Johnny Hodges and Ben Webster, satellites of no small brilliance in the dance band world. Cotton Pageant Has “Real McCoy” In Royalty Ranks Royalty has been the key-note of all the past Cotton Pageants but tomorrow night the regal atmos phere at DeWare Field House is designed to hit a new high when a “real McCoy” princess, the Prin cess Marie Gloria Sulkowski, will be a duchess in the court of their majesties, King and Queen Cotton. Prince Marie Gloria is the daugh ter of Prince Stanislas Sulkowski of the royal Austrian house of Haps- burg. At the present she and her parents are living in Mexico City. Princess Maria Gloria is to be escorted by Clyde Raley of Ma chine Gun Troop Cavalry and will represent the Agronomy Society. Am*t mm mm o-m—o- The Cotton Pageant duchess representing The Battalion newspaper and comic magazine is Sylvia Rosenthal of Ft. Worth, shown at the left. She will be escorted by her brother, E. M. (Manny) Rosenthal, who is acting as Battalion representative to the publicity committee of the Cotton Pageant. At the right is Billie Gayle Hunton of Dallas who is the duchess representing A. & M. student publications. Miss Hunton is a freshman student at S. M. U. She will be escorted in the Pageant by Benton Elliott, also of Dallas. ’41 Cotton Pageant Has Elaborate Plans Evening’s Program Begins with Pageant At 8 Friday Night The 1941 edition of the Annual Cotton Style Show and Pageant will be officially underway Friday night at 8:00 p. m. when J. J. Woolket, the master of ceremonies for the evening, opens the even ing’s festivities interpreting the theme and idea for the setting of this year’s show. After his interpretation of the Pageant’s story, Woolket will in troduce Dean Kyle who in turn will present Sterling C. Evans, pres ident of the Federal Land Bank at Houston. At this point in the pro gram Evans will present J. T. An derson with his crown and make the remarks to the audience. Woolket will then present the duchesses to King Cotton’s court from the many local and state wide organizations. After the pre sentation Connie Lindley of Fort Worth will be brought to the king and crowned by him as his queen. The evening’s program is sched uled to continue with the Pageant’s (Continued on Page 6) the Agronomy Society for this year. Other than his Cotton Ball activi ties Anderson has been a member of the Dallas A. & M. Club and the Duncan Volunteers. His wait er’s job has only been one of the means by which he has paid prac tically his entire way through col lege. He has worked in the land scape are division of the N.Y.A., sold stationery and worked for the student corsage concession. Includ ing his summer jobs Anderson has earned over 90 per cent of his col lege expenses. It is expected that Anderson will be in the top quarter of his June graduating class. After graduation he plans to return to his home town, Garland, if not called into active duty as a second lieutenant. PALACE Thursday - Friday - Saturday GEO. BRENT • mary astor LadU W*um * U.ctj. H-Plant Prevue 11 P. M. Saturday Night Edward G. Robinson John Garfield —in— “Sea Wolf” Also Shown Sun. - Mon. 3 Winners of Cofton Study Tour Revealed Tomorrow at Pageant The three winners of the Tenth- Annual Cotton Study Tour will be announced at the Cotton Pageant tomorrow evening, Prof. J. S. Mog- ford of the agronomy department said in an interview Wednesday. This year’s trip will be to South America and will be paid for from the proceeds of the Cotton Style Show, Pageant and Ball. It is gen erally conceded that the Cotton Study Tours are among the long est awarded any college group by ►their school. The study group will leave New York aboard the S. S. Santa Clara on June 20 and will arrive at Tal- ara, Peru, June 30. From July 1 to July 27 the group will tour Peru, Chile, Bolivia and some of the is lands off the west coast of South America and will visit, among others, the cities of Lima, Callao, Arequipa, Mollendo and Antofa gasta. The return sailing is sched uled to leave from Antofagasta and will terminate at either Ner Or leans or New York. The primary purpose of the trip is to acquaint the students at first hand with the cotton and other agricultural industries of South America. While in Chile they will give particular attention to the niter deposits there and the pro cess of manufacturing these de posits into commercial fertilizers. The winners of the cotton study tour to all parts of the United States and Canada last year were Harry Forbes, C. L. Mason, H. L. Rucker and H. L. Petty. Tildon Easly, associate professor in the agronomy department, was the leader of the tour. Trips in the past have been to both Europe and Asia. In 1932 a tour of England, Belgium, Ger many, Switzerland and France was (Continued on Page 6) Open Letter To The Aggies Again we are happy to announce that we have secured the services of Mr. Sam Kaplan, who is now in complete charge of our tailoring department. AGGIE MILITARY SHOP North Gate P. S. Our Junior Uniforms HAVE NOT BEEN RAISED IN PRICE. See our display. AGGIE MILITARY SHOP TOiSMOKE^whethingI "YES, SIR, CAMEL IS THE CIGARETTE TOR ME- EXTRA „ /MILD! 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! and here’s the scientific slant, “BUCKY” WALTERS: The smoke of slower-burning Camels gives you 28% Less Nicotine than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes tested —less than any of them —according to independent scientific tests of the smoke itself! THERE’S THE WIND-UP. And here’s the pitch-an inside slant from baseball’s master moundsman, Cincinnati’s famous “Bucky” Walters: “My cigarette has to be mild, naturally. 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