THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 30, 1942- Dean Ryle Crowns King At 11th Show Duchesses Selected Leaders From Texas Cities and Colleges Dr. E. J. Kyle, dean of the school of agriculture will crown the king and the king in turn will crown the queen. The maids to the queen will be dressed in white cotton dresses and will carry red rosebuds tied with blue ribbon carrying out the victory theme popular at this time. One of the duchesses to the queen of the Cotton Pageant to morrow night will be Miss Laura Beesley of Texas university. She will be duchess from The Battal ion and will be escorted by Clyde C. Franklin, junior managing edi tor of The Battalion. She is a member of Pi Lambda Theta, hon orary fraternity for women at Texas U. Requirements for membership in the organization include a B-plus average and recommendation by two members of the faculty. New members were initiated, at a ban quet recently at which Mrs. Horn er P. Rainey was the guest speak er. Miss Beesley is a junior at the university and is also a member of The Bluestockings,' a dramatic club which studies and presents plays in connection with the cur ricula in which they are engaged. A great deal of attention is paid to Shakespeare, the faculty there states. She also belongs to the Cap and Gown. Duchesses will enter the court which will be staged in Guion Hall down one aisle and exit down the other. Escorts will meet their dates at the foot of the stage after the duchess has made one full turn on the stage to display her dress. The names of the duchesses and their escorts will be announced over the public address system and the escort will take his date and walk up the aisle and go up stairs to the balcony to be seated for the remainder of the perform ance. Origipal plans for this year’s Cotton Pageant called for it to be held in Sbisa Hall but the plans had to be changed because it would not be possible to clear the floor in time for the show. It had been customary in the past to hold the pageant in the Deware Field House, commonly called the gym, but this was ruled out early in the THE BATTALION Battalion Duchess and Escort RADIO REPAIRS AND PARTS The Student Co-op Call 4-4114 Pictured above is Miss Laura Beesley, Texas uni versity junior who has been selected as duchess of The Battalion in the Cotton Pageant. To the right is her escort Clyde C. Franklin, Battalion Reporter for the Cotton Pageant and Ball. Franklin is a junior in civil engineering. H H Brians, Social Secretary, Directs Duchesses and Escorts MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS In our selection of Gifts you will find many sug gestions in the way of SILVER JEWELRY PERFUMES COLOGNES $1.00 to $5.00 Mother’s Day Cards, Too Come in soon! SANKEYPARK 111 N. Main St. Bryan By Clyde C. Franklin Howard H. Brians, C Cavalry, social secretary of the eleventh an nual Cotton Pageant and Ball is a senior in Agronomy from El Paso. He is in charge of all the corre spondence with the 160 odd duch esses and their escorts who will be presented on the stage of Guion Hall at 8 p.m. May 1. Brians is Lieutenant Colonel of the Cavalry regiment and was chosen as one of the representa tives in Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities this year. Last year he was junior social secretary of the Cotton Ball and parlimentarian of the Agronomy society. Brians follows in the footsteps of Jim Pinson, social secretary of the tenth annual Cotton Ball held last year. Brians and Pinson were both parlimentarians in the Ag ronomy society the year before they were elected to the office of social secretary and they are both from C Cavalry. Having handled the correspond ence and pictures of the duchesses year in favor of the old mess hall. The tradition of having the Cot ton Ball in the mess hall has not been broken and that event will begin immediately after the pag eant is over. Probably about 10:15 p. m. Tickets will be sold at the door for $1.50. Winners of this year’s cotton tour will' be announced at the pageant and the winners intro duced to the audience from the stage. THE LAST MINUTE TOUCH UP For That Well Groomed Look! •Look your best at all times by having regular appointments with us. Y.M.C.A. Barber Shop “In Old Y” “In New Y’ he states that the girls entering into the pageant this year are the prettiest ever and that this year the society will present the grand est Cotton Pageant ever to he staged on the A. & M. campus. Brians asserted “Interest is run ning high as evidenced by the rap id sale of reserved seat tickets. Already tickets are getting scarce as everyone wanting a reserved seat is trying to avoid the mad dening last-minute rush at the ticket window.” Reserved seats are still to be had by calling either at the W.S.D. store in Bryan or at the Agronomy office Room 300 Agriculture Building. Reserved seats are 50 cents and general ad mission seats 35 cents. Miss Ernestine Ashe, Cotton Pageant queen, was chosen by the members of the society to reign over the Cotton Court with Gene Wilmeth, King Cotton, at the Red bud Festival held last month on the TSCW campus. At the same time eight maids to the queen were chosen from the girls in the festi val. This year’s pageant will differ from those of the past few years in that there will be no style show of cotton creations. This had to be left out because of the increased number of duchesses and the lack of space in Guion Hall. The duchesses and their escorts will enter the main auditorium of Guion Hall, march down the aisle, the duchess will mount the stage and display her gown, meet her escort in front of the stage and exit down the other aisle and pro ceed to the balcony to be seated. The king and queen and the maids to the queen will be seated on the stage which will be set as a pala tial room. The route to be followed by this year’s Cotton Tour has not been mapped yet but it is almost cer tain that it will be confined to the borders of the United States. Pilots Raise Eye Brows — No Wonder RANDOLPH FIELD, April 29., —We just know there’s no con nection—but pilots here reached bacl^ and felt their parachutes, raised their eyebrows a bit when this ad appeared in today’s “Daily Bulletin:” “For Sale—Hand crocheted bed spread. Can be seen at Parachute Department.” J S Mogford Original 'Daddy’ Of Now Famous CottonNTours Beginning almost in obscurity J. S. Mogford started the first Cotton Pageant. It was his own idea to promote a world tour for worthy students of Agronomy. At pregent a series of nine examina tions is given covering all the phases of agronomy and the three men receiving the highest grades get the tvip. Mogford received his first de gree from A. & M. in 1916 and later completed the work required for a M. S. in 1920. At the beginning of his Cotton Pageants he had all the little girls in the vicinity of the college whom he could get to be in his show participate. They wore cotton wash-dresses, bringing them out with them and changing their cos tumes in the lounge of the old Y.M.C.A. His project gained in momentum and has kept rolling for eleven years and this year he is again presenting the Cotton Pageant which now carries with it the Cot ton Ball and in it will be some 160 of the most beautiful girls in the Southwest. The show begins in Guion Hall at 8 p.m. May 1. Page 3 Wilmeth Pays Own Way, Wins Many High Honors and Awards Gene Wilmeth, king cotton of 1942, a senior in D Infantry comes from Ebony, Texas and will reign over the Cotton Pageant in Guion Hall May 1. In his court will be some 160 of the most beautiful girls in the Southwest. These girls will represent over 120 schools and clubs. All of their escorts are Aggies. Wilmeth is president of the Ag ronomy society and last year was junior business manager of the Cotton Ball. He is a member of the scholarship Honor society, a member of the Press club and Gum-Shoe for the Duncan Diners. He is circulation manager for The Battalion this year and was a member of the circulation staff of the publication last year. He won a coveted Fish numeral in track in the spring of 1939 and won cross-country letters in 1939 and 1940. He was captain of the cross-country team in 1940. Besides the achievements enum erated above he has paid his own expenses through school, having worked as a waiter in the mess hall for four years. Wilmeth states, “Up until this Cotton School Will Be Held For Thirty-Third Year Although most of the short courses generaly scheduled at A. & M. during the summer months have been cancelled due to the speed-up program at the college, the annual summer cotton school will be held for the thirty-third year. The course will last six weeks, June 1-July 11 and during the same period three ginner’s courses will be offered. The first will run from June 1-June 13; the second from June 15-June 27; and the final one from June 29-July 11. Owing to the large enrollment expected for the regular courses and the number of men taking de fense training, it was announced that living facilities will not be available for students taking the cotton school course but that rooms will be available just off the campus. Picture Not Blackout But Group of Negro Spiritualists in Dark Some comment is still going around about the picture which appeared on the front page of The Battalion a few days ago under the caption reading “Langs ton A Capella Choir.” Most of the corps assumed that it was a pic ture of a black cat in a blackout but this was erroneous. The picture was of a negro choral group but was unfortunate ly run upside down. Another mis take in the picture was in the making. Before snapping the negro group the house lights were dim med, adding to the shady appear ance. Students commuting from their homes to Massachusetts State college and back again pile up 2,- 479 miles each day. year I preferred blonds.” He changed his ideals when he saw Miss Ernestine Ashe whom he and the social committee selected to be the prettiest of 100 of the most beautiful girls on the TSCW campus to be queen of this year’s Cotton Pageant. Miss Ashe is a freshman at TSCW and a sister to Miss Anna Ruth Ashe who was chosen as Aggie Day Sweetheart at the TSCW football game last fall. Miss Ashe is a senior at TSCW. Staged as a throne room in a Agronomy Duchess Pictured above is Miss Pauline Webster, duchess to the Cotton Pageant from the Agronomy society. Her escort is Howard Warner, business manager of the Cotton Ball and Pageant. palace the stage of Guion Hall will seat the king and queen sur rounded by the maids of honor to the queen and their escorts. Cotton Ball Net Profits Will Be Split Fifty-Fifty All proceeds from this year’s Cotton Ball will be split equally with the Student Activities office and the Agronomy department as trustees of the Cotton' Tour fund. This is in accordance with the agreement made at the beginning of this year by the Student Ac tivities committee at the same time that it was agreed that the Guion Hall picture show would give 20 percent of its profits to that committee to be re-distributed to various clubs and organizations on the campus. The additional money available through the Cotton Ball will be distributed to the clubs next year along with the other proceeds go ing into the office in charge. Because the money is being di vided in this way there are no passes being issued to the dance as it is being held in accordance with the rule that all dances held by regiments or organizations not open to the general student body should be corps dances. An other regular corps dance will fol low the Cotton Ball on Saturday night, also to be held in Sbisa Hall. N DON’T FORGET MOTHER ON MOTHER’S DAY See our assortment of Mother’s Day Cards, Handkerchiefs and Pins Make Selection While Stock Is Complete Campus Variety Store Get the Newest in Both Styles on VICTOR mdBLDEBIED RECORDS “NOT MINE” “SWEET TALK” “CARNIVAL” “THE SONG IS YOU”, “THE JITTERBUG WALTZ” “IF YOU ARE BUT A DREAM’ Artie Shaw .Johnny Durham Artie Shaw Frank Sivatra Fats Waller Teddy Powell HASWELL’S BRYAN /y Get Measured Now For FAMOUS LUCCHESE BOOTS See D. Cangelosi at the College Sta tion Shoe Repair Shop, North Gate, with a Perfect Fit Guaranteed by Mr. Lucchese. Buy “The Perfect Ankle Break Boots” Lucchese Boot Co., Inc. “MAKERS OF MILITARY BOOTS FOR 59 YEARS” 101 West Travis San Antonio