Show C Became a Singer Because Didn't Like Work - Ives I I -- By W G ROGERS NEW YORK! (AP) — "I was ! always lazy” says Burl Ives "When I was la boy I thought singing would keep me out of work” Moroccan Nationalists IW Hid yty high-pitche- CASABLANCA A w A d — I Washington” contestants in the rotunda of the Capitol after the girls all clad in shorts visited the House gallery In case you’re wondering the House recently lifted its ban on feminine visitors sliorts-cla- d CLEAN SOLID MUSIC Artists Add Dignity Jazz To Minneapolis ntaTNEAPQLIS (AP) — A pair times he even assaults the folk-son- BURL IVES Admits He’s Lazy g - Sqan-dinavfa- key$ n d professor jazz student John Lu- cas of Carleton With Parker and Evans it was harmony at first sight That was the year the art center decided to get Evans out of Minneapolis to play his Dixieland music for a wider audience as an example of a true 20th Century folk music form Parker followed along naturally as a guest artist Evans usually has in his band besides his own cornet a clarinet trombone pjano and drums He sometimes add bass - Doc seems almost too shy to be little a band leader A nearly-balman 'with a game leg he often plays with his eyes closed and a stance suggesting that he is doing nothing more important than waiting for a street car When hottest blowing his cleanest notes he may be leaning against the- piano with one leg crossed soft-spoke- n five-piec- e d -- - over the other Methodist minister’s son from Spring Valley Minn Evans now 47 graduated from Carleton with a major in English Though he played in dance bands he taught high school two years before deciding he would be happier making music He has studied the playing of all the great jazz trumpeters but his driving clean melodic style is quite his own At least one critic Wilder Hobson of the Saturday Review of Literature has called Evans the best since the late Bix Beiderbecke The University of Minnesota not only presented him at one of its convocations in a highly successful "History of Jazz” concert It has sponsored him on a tour and Doc is planning more of them "What I want most to do” he says "is to get jazz — real Dixieland — across to the people” A yard of the Walker Art Center and overflowed onto the lawn Doc steps to the mike If the number has special significance in the history of Dixieland' jazz Doc tells about it Then the band begins to play The clean solid music which pours out has been called by some critics pure Dixieland secaudiond to none The ence loves it and often interrupts a piece midway to applaud a solo jazz-wis- e lick At Dock’s bidding Knocky bounds up to the stage from a seat in the audience and awray they go Knocky plays with his heart and the rest of his body too His shoulders twitch and hunch his feet stamp and some 1 ‘ GO-GO-G- big-cia- mid-forti- es - " he to have von don’t Rich to shop j all-nig- ht Souk-Ahra- I 0”orr°"puWs Charge w v 2 2®e? H folk-song- Mattress and SALES MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING tSO mattress sold with a box Both for the one price spring fully for construction and guaranteed complete relaxation Boht for $3750 The Famous Every ) - Thank You 1 rt - IN O i spring-fille- mf! rtn Mattress and box spring A real value— that we are offering at this time for only $5950 Compare it with any mattress of the same price 5 KNITS 3 r d "ZENITH" - V i FOR Box Spring Combinations - j The Famous 1M most lovely of two piece knit suits In your choice of shorty biouse or shorty cordigon Supremely elegant with oil the importont style details Extra sendee the 100 Zephyr Chenille "WINTHROP" pe-wash- Innerspring mattress and box spring — for this special occasion we offer you this value for only s Aley The Famous "SIMMONS SPECIAL" Compare this with any high qual- ity mattress Excellent workmanship throughout Innerspring mattress and box spring NATIONALLY 1 $500 Month S7®5 irr — No Additional Carrying Charges for Easy Terms zn ASSOCIATED h promised local not if boards have a gation new of school opening demand C0V terms only a month away while £omje? speed” by taking advocates of the South’s tradi- initial steps toward integration tional pattern of racial separa- by the opening of fall terms of By or intent : I - ’ FOLK-SONGS- ? ADVERTISED South to Test Segregation When Schools Open Ruling THE PRESS The NAACP has “We’re willing to make it a test case” said Attorney Alfred Albert of Boston representing the distributor He cited a July 6 decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Court which declared unconstitutional the state censorship of movies shown on Sun-da- y J -- were wounded In Moulay Idriss five persons were reported killed In Algeria to the east of Morocco some 30 persons were killed Friday night and yesterday Troops killed 25 or more ! guerrillas in an fight Three Algerians were found with their throats cut in the Aures Mountains center of a re volt that started last November Another rebel in a band of 10 s was killed at near the Tunisian border The body of a kidnaped town councilor from a suburb of Philippeville a was discovered Moulay Idriss is a city of nearly 10000 sacred to Moslems celebrating their biggest religious Keb-i- r festival of the year— Aid-E- l One of those reported killed was the French lieutenant of a company of firemen The other four were Moroccan demonstrators nationalists presumably Eight other demonstrators were reported wounded In' Casablanca young Moroccans roamed the streets 6f the old native quarter shouting "down with France and out with the W'oman er folk-son- g York h The worst fighting was at Marrakech where nine demonstrators were reported killed Two Europeans including a’ young "Instead of doing the singing themselves tend to people listen to Godfrey and Ed Sullivan That’s what I call getting music from the outside in But I believe sipging is coming back More and jnore people are getthe inside out ting music "Tm a great inside-ou- t mah myself I’m not much of a listener We (wife and son) very seldom go to pictures or look at television I prefer to sit alone with my thoughts or do something myself” He- has a mustache and a beard and mobile features He’s r a smoker both on and off the stage He had a ketch but has no more time' to sail it He’s pretty proud that in his he has only three fillings and pretty said that his son has four He says it’s because he had the advantage of being brought up in naturally-grow- n greens raw milk and such like Before the "Cat” curtain goes up he vocalizes for 10 minutes and he does scales before the second act It keeps his voice in painting recently and 1 think the right place he says On I could communicate there too” recital tour he does about the French” WHAT ABOUT same but the play is harder on What’s happening to the folk- - the vocal muscfes he says f song? s has Crockett and Caesar “The field of been pretty weli worked over It BRISTOL Conn (UP) — The doesn’t seem likely that after the town of Wapping may have researches of such men as Lomax a Davy Crockett — the Rev David and Cecil Sharp and Vance with Crockett — but Bristol5 can step his Ozarks collections there can even back in farther history be much left jthat hasn’t been Julius Caesar on lives Ambler out and presented in brought recital or printed I still' get bal- Road lads given to me while I’m on sn tour sometimes sung to me by some backstage jvisitor” "On the other hand” he conII CEVERING tinued "they enjoy a respect 11 they did not use to There was a ttfme when a college student CLEANERS thought it' was no credit to him to know ‘Barbara Allen’ or hillCLOSED FOR billy numbersj and that- only VACATION Beethoven and Brahms counted Now education's smarter A lot AUG 1 TO 15 of young people sing these pieces now and ‘will teach their children There’s a revival in colleges record $ales get much 1 3 worthy colleague Knocky was born near Fort Worth the son of a cotton farmer He began the study of piano at the age of four by watching how the rolls of the old fashioned player piano depressed the keys and depressing the same ones He pickedjUp the nickname "Knocky” abotit then he says when a piano hammer broke- - off flew out the open front ofi the piano and struck him in the forehead Parker studied English as well as piano at Texas Christian University He taught a year at the University of Nevada playing in a Reno nightclub at the same time before winding up at Kentucky Wesleyan He has also played in several New York night spots while doing graduate work at Columbia Still playing most of his music by ear Parker picked up enough long-hai- r Chiefly via that route to be presented in formal concerts Once he played with the Fort Worth Symphony Bach and Mozart are in his repertoire along with barrelhouse and blues At Owensboro Parker lives out the more sedate side of his life On the campus he is mostly "prof” to his students Married and the father of three children he says proudly: "I am a Sunday School teacher and youth director in a Methodist church in Owensboro and I get to direct the church minstrel ’ show each year!” larger: -- with his elbows Parker and Evans met in 1953 when Parker came to Evans’ alma mater Carleton College near Minneapolis for a concert at the invitation of still another English of implausible musicians and a liberal art center have joined forces to make jazz almostas respectable in this dignifiei stronghold as theHong-haireMinneapolis Symphony Orchestra The artists are Paul (Doc) Evans an elfin Dixieland cornet-is- t and John W (Knocky) Parker a pianist who leads a double life about as spectacular in quite a different way as Dr Jekyll and Mr Hjde Evans who looks and acts more like the minister’s son he is than a hot horn player is a local product After each conCombo cert he and his dash two miles to a Minneapolis night club where they pack ’em in nightly Parker is an import an occasional guest artist When he’s not pounding a keyboard into submission he presides over the English department of Kentucky Wesleyan University in Owensboro Doc taught English too in high school He and Parker can switch a conversation from blues to Beowulf without dropping a beat Picture this scene: It’s a balmy summer evening A crowd of 1200 manyin shirtsleeves and ranging in age from 15 to 50 has jammed the court- he has a in Parker r X'x j In such a quest iX j At present you know him in Williams” Tennessee "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” in which he’s the male leid — not the cat not the hot tin roof but rough and tender Big Daddy WAS A GOSPEL SINGER But you knew him first — unless you knew him in Southern Illinois as a boy gospel singer the work which he thought would keep him out of work — as the interpreter and also 5as books author of some and the autobiography "Wayfaring Stranger” Does being a ballad singer help him 'when he turns to straight J acting? “Actor and fainter and singer and Mr Sarnoff (David Sarnoff chairman of the Board Radio he Corporation of America”) replies "We’re all in the same business the communications I’ve! done some writbusiness ing and all my life I’ve dealt in words This standing up before an audience is a transferable ability or talent I took up Pulitzer-prizewinn- ' House anti-Frenc- jp X e nationalists rioted during Moslem religious services yesterday in a series of demonstrations Fourteen or more persons were killed j guitar Moroccan JULY 31 1955 BOSTON (UP)— A French film “The Game of Love” yesterday became the first movie ever shown in Boston without prior review by the city censor The triangle story of a teen-agcouple and an older woman opened today at the Beacon Hill Theater “in direct' violation of the law” according to a lawyer for the distributor Times Film Corp of New Morocco ' A3 R BOSTON THEATER SHOWS FIRST UNCENSORED FILM Riot 14 Die '1 STANDARD-EXAMINE- OGDEN CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING ! He lets out one of those tinlaughs that gling his records in heard pn you’ve his concert-hal- l appearances and on Broadway "It’s kept me in a regular stew of work all my life” He doesn’t look as though it had worn him down however As big as two Santa Clauses he has a paunch on which he could rest a harp a guitar and a mandolin too all at the 'same time though he usually strums only one the SOME NEW SIGHTS IN THE CAPITOL Minority Xeader Joseph Martin Jr chats with a group of “Miss THE OGDEN liti-Wit- ''? tion yesterday were stepping up school While conflict over hte race ispreparations for the coming sue showdown on public school segappeared inevitable in soiqe a growing number of school areas regation Citizens’ councils in Mississippi systems are taking heed of the and Txas are planning strategy court decree and charting varyfor resisting the U S Supreme ing courses toward eventual inteCourt decision outlawing sepa- gration Resistance to the segregation ration of students on the basis of race alone ruling was hit a severe blow durThe Alabama Legislature has ing the week when a Texas U S sent to Governor James Folsom district judge former Congress-- 3 BIG BARGAIN GROUPS to circumvent man R Ewing Thomason voided all sections of the Texas consti-- i the epurt ruling In Georgia state legal and edu- tution and statutes on‘ racial seg-- 1 cation officials are setting up con- regation in school systems ferences with all local school boards where segregation lawLADIES an act designed suits are threatened Meanwhile the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoplealso was stepping up its campaign of petitioning local school boards to take immediate steps toward integration lots of good stretching big soft arms length That’s the comfort everyone in the family wants and that’s j'ust what these living room suits have to offer Plumply cushioned large sofa with matching lounge chairs Wide selection of colors and fabrics Deep deep cushions May we help you stop drinking? 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