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Show SIGNPOST Page 13 Friday, April 16, 1965 WHEN ELee TJkaOxes D r t WE HAVE IT BUEHLBR BinQHflm SODs if peGaE? art mav A i i - -jv- , , ! f 1 it, s 1 - , v. : ? 41 l 1 nie 3 D"s, one of Capitol Record's newest discoveries, will appear May 1, 7:30 p.m. at the Fine Arts Auditorium as part of the Junior Prom. Though just breaking into national prominence, thevocal-in-strucmental trio has been together for more than a year tour ing colleges and universities, principally in the intermountain west and the west coast. They have a repertoire of more than one -hundred songs, and are called by Capitol records officials "one of the most creative groups to come along in years." Their two-hour concert will include songs from their latest album "New Dimensions in Folk Songs.' Featured on the album are some of the immortal poems of the English language set to the 3 D's original music. Rudyard Kipling, Edgar Allen Poe, Edward Arlington Robinson, and Alfred Nothing can take the press out of Lee-Prest slacks Not that it's on his mind right now. And it needn't be. Those Lee- Prest Leesures can't help but stay crisp and neat. No matter what you put them through. They have a new permanent press. So the crease stays in. The wrinkles stay out. Permanently. And that's without ironing. No 'touch-ups, either. They're made from Lee's special blend of 50 polyester and 50 combed. cotton. For wash and wear.. .with conviction. Incidentally, that permanent press is the only change we've made n Leesures. They still have that lean, honest look . . . smart, tailored fit. Mew Lee-Prest Leesures. Test their permanent press yourself. It isn't lecessary, but it s a great way to spend an evening. From $5.98 to $7.98. .H. 0. lee Co., Inc., Kanus City 1 J, Mo. . show-stopping rendition of "Granada."All this dimension and versatility are a product of experiment and development before hundreds of audiences. The 3 D's have toured the United States and Can ada sveral times; have played to Korean farmers, Japanese students, military men in Guam and Okinawa, fifty-thousand boy scouts at Valley Forge, governors and congressmen. They have appeared with Jimmy Stewart, Art Link-letter, Anita Bryant, Stan Mu-sial, "Pa" and "Hoss' of T.V.'s Bonanza series, Roberta Shore, the dinger Sisters, and even Danny 0 Day and Farfel. To reach their performances, they've traveled by car, jet, cargo plane, helicopter, and currently motor around the country in a pick-up truck with a camper on the back. This is a necessity V 1 7 f f Lord Tennyson are among ttie noted poets whose works are featured on the album. Versatile, thought provoking, and sometimes hilarious are the adjectives most often heard after a 3 D's concert. Accompanying themselves on guitar, bass, banjo, trumpet, conga and bongos, piano and even an occasional finger cymbal, the trio goes from standard folk fare like "Weary Lonesome Traveler" and "Mar-iah" through such pop standards as "Jezebal", dramatically moving and funny sketches, and a since their shows now call for four guitars, two banjos, bongo and conga drums, trumpet, string bass, microphones, sound system, costumes and traveling gear. Versatility and adaptability was not a choice with the 3 D's apparently. It was a matter of survival. All this holds well for concert goers at Weber State College since the 3 D's will draw upon experience to give two hours of the best in contemporary music and comedy. The show is called the "The 3 D's in Dimension." SIGNPOST STAFF Editor A. Brent Pulsipher Associate Editor Jack Suttlemyre Managing Editor Camille Ramnarace Sports Editor Winslow Hurst Front Page Editor Carol Valentine Society Editor Penny Furness Reporters . . Gene Carlson, Elyse Pryor, Johnny Jones, Dennis Read, Alan Meyer, Rick Hassett, Kenny Ala, Jan Gudmundsen, Joe Wright, Sue Ann Judd Feature Writer Steve Larsen Drama Critic George Bntsakires Business Manager Mark Zeller Advisor Reed H. Blake |