Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1952 — Page 25

. 6, 1952

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30 Juvenile Jury )0 Zoo Parade 30 Western Film 30 Story Theater 00 Faye Emerson 30 This Is Show Business 00 Comedy Hour 00 TV Playhouse 00 Red Skelton 30 Studio One 00 Charlie Wild 00 Weeks News 10 Sign Off

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‘ on radio and television shows, in the movies, and NOW ON versity in Cincinnati. , records.

SUNDAY, JAN. 6, 1952

New Singing Star ~ |Make Jack Excites Disc Collectors ‘A Dull-Boy

A NEW AMERICAN singing star has got the musie| CINCINNATL Jan. 5-Telerl

sion gets. in the home hove no world quite excited during the past eighteen months with effect on whether or not children

his sensationally rapid rise to top spots on the concert stage, learn in sc hool, according to a survey conducted by Xawier Uni-

Record Review— TV Doesn't |

“But,” the report warns, “like “most recreations, television can be used to’ excess, whieh may result in damage to physical wellbeing and mental alertness.” | The findings were announced by Dr, -Raymond F. McCoy. director of the Xavier Graduate, Division. = He was chairman of the study project. Following a survey of 1000 chils dren in the sixth and seventh

He is William Warfield, brilJiant Negro baritone, whom most! Hoosiers know so far chiefly through his moving rendition eof “0l’ Man River” jn the recentlyshown new movie version of “Show Boat.” "When he made his | New York concert debut on Mar.'

William Warfield will be guest star on Charlie McCar-

_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ a : . Off the Record—

‘ For Those Who Never Heard Bessie Smith

By DONNA MIKELS THE EARLY and tragic feath of blues ewpreds Bessie Smith cheated many of the younger jazz enthusiasts who { could judge her only by the raves of the oldtimers and the scratched records picked up in second-hand stores. | Now Columbia Records is mak-| — —— ing a monumental effort to make Blues,” “Reckless Blues,” “You've %it up. Their four 12-inch wolume Been A Good Ole Wagon,” “Sobof “The Bessie Smith Story” is bin’ Hearted Blues” and “Cold in more Bessie than was ever gath- Hand Blues,” “Ticket Agent Ease i ered in one room, even during the Your Window Down” and “Jail ' 5 feet 9 inch, 210-pound singer's house Blues.”

& > a Bessie Smith * 118, : on x = . «+. Empress of Blues. The selections scan her careers VOLUME II—This book covers

thy's program at 7'p. m. today | on WFBM. ¥1 grades, Dr. Mc(8y declared that: “The study reveals that

19, "1950, he was a virtually un- poorer tele

known young singer; but the ecstatic reports of the critics on parental eontrol and poorer school that ' occasion swept him into achievement tend to be found in fame. the same child.”

Warfield was born in Arkansas, but his family moved to Roches-

The study

data gathered in this Real Estate vision habits and Jower IQs, lower Values ‘Safe’

Good -déemand for real estate in the : gives every promise of.continu- country blues dealt with {elevision ing in 1952, as it has in 1951. So fame, as it is—recreation—and id n : forecasts Albert M. Greenfield, to substitute and on to her varied the

la quick cycle from cheap tent a wide range of styles and years, shows, carnivals and honky from 1924's “Weeping Willow tonks to recordings in 1923 that Blues,” through her last recordmade her big time till her own Ing session with all:stars Jack high life and changing public T&agarden, Chu Berry and Benny tastes turned her into a has been Goodman. There's “Gimme A '30's. They start with the Pigfoot,” “Take Me For A Buggy which gave her Rides “Do Your Duty,” “New to the more sophisticated Orleans Hop Scop Blues,” “Jazz material she tried unsuccessfully bo Brown and-Memphis Town tremendously autobiograph-

ter, N. Y., when he was only concern itself with programs de- : we " three. He started his singing signed to aid learning. president of Albert M. Greenfield attempts to regain public favor. ical “Gin House Blues” and “No career as a boy soprano, but “eg fo was , wav Dr. & Co., one of the nation’s larg- body Knows You When You're) y p Startlifig” was the way Dr 8 . 8" Déwn and Out,” and her

William Warfield

quickly developed into-a baritone of phenomenal range. He won a scholarship School of Music,

televiewing. habits of

saw service in through all etermity. Military Intelligence during : an n World War II because of ‘his. wmMORTON GOULD: knowledge of foreign languages,’ : has been on the New York stage record,

spend an awerage of 30 hors : _ watching video each week, CURTAIN pared with the 25 hours

MIL.-4451, consisting of

in “Call Me Mister” and other mr Gould's arrangement of eight And he adds that “an appalling shows, and has finally emerged songs of varying moods from percentage” of parents have no ” . #oncern about what their chil-

as. an artist of genuine stature, American musical shows. The a- singer with an exceptionally collection begins with Rodgers’ beautiful voice plus sound tech- “Bewitched.” closes with Porter's nique. He may now be heard «go In Love,” and includes Veron a new long-playing record that non Duke's “What Is There to Programs they choose. Columbia has issued. Say?” Kern's “Poor Pierrot,” And what do they choose? “ soil Gershwin’s “Mine,” Weill's “Sep-. The survey shows OLD AMERICAN SONGS, sung temper Song,” Lane's by William Warfield, accompanied Moon,” and Gould's own by the distinguished American Timing” - They are played composer, Aaron Copeland, who gistinctive style by the ; made the arrangements. are five early and mid-Nineteenth the piano. Century hit tunes whose titles are the piano.

dren watch on television, Fifty-

“Bad watch Milton Berle regularly.

Playhouse, by 83 per

—H. Ww. -M.

real estate brokerage r children. with offices in Philadelphia, to the Eastman impious act is candemned to hunt ye said that 12 and 13-year-olds York and Atlantic City. With labor and materials high mercial com-and scarce, under government «“gentimental gesture” sparked by they regulations,

McCoy described the data on the est

TIME is a Columbia 12-inch LP gpend in school. real levels are sure to be maintained.

“With the forces of now upon us and ever increasing was due to leave for Mississippi by the taxes on income, and the growing in 1937

: : demand for two per cent of the children said gains,”

they are permitted to watch any qqiate is

that 86 value “Old Devil per cent of these pre-adolescents grows, Mr. Today, in. Next in line came three west- breadth of our country, Morton ern programs—Six Gun Theater, ists sound evidence of expansion There Gould Orchestra, with Gould at watched by 85 per cent; Six Gun and growth: cent, and munities, . | Hopalong Cassidy, by 70 per cent. tion, new shopping centers,

‘new’ | firma HER LAST recording session style “Black Mountain Blues” | in 1933, two. years after she was and “Poor Man's Blues.” officially washed up as a comartist, was called a . 4. VOLUME JXII--Here are Bes-| John Hammond who never lost gie's first electrically - recorded | present his .admiration for her as the masters, made at the first session] greatest of the blues singers. with Fletcher Henderson's Hot| Ironically this same enthusiast Six." Previously she had recorded | acoustical method, with] . to bring Bessie batk to sound picked up by large horns. | capital record with Jimmy Johnson. On, As “Cake-Walking Babies” and]

Mr. Greenfield says,

estate values at

inflation

long - term

says Mr. Greenfield, “real the eve of his departure she was “Yellow Dog Blues’ were being becoming increasingly injured in a traffic crash and made under a specially con- | attractive as an investment.” died from loss of blood, an un- serycted tent of monks’. cloth’ the It is axiomatic that real estate necessary death traced in most tent collapsed around Bessie grows as ‘the country documents to her being denied The Hot Six, the recording direc

Greenfield points out. admission to one hospital because tor and a bevy of engineers mid-|

throughout the length and of her race. She died on the way gtieam. Nevertheless. it became there ex- to another hospital. a iazz classic oe : The four volumes include a 47- This volume included “CakeIndustry, new com- song cross-section presenting the Walking Baby,” a hit tune 30 new means of distribu- blues singer with such felloW yjicue Columbia dared not renew greats as Louls Armstrong, jaage it for 15 years after it was

“The Boatmen's Dance,” “The|- ree ~————— housing. Fletcher Henderson, James P. .. i" 1995 aq well ¢ Dodger, aoe Ml go — Johnson, Coleman Hawkins and a rarity with bri i “Simple Gifts” (Shaker Song), TV Ch Si I $i el . . . Jack Teagarden. “ : : ts] , and “I Bought Me a Cat” (Chil- assis imp i ie Making Fishing Rods It starts with the first “country “Therell Be Slglime B : Ra dren’s song). These are on one . : blues” record ever issued, with re 2 0 me in lhe side of Columbia 10-inch LP And Cost Comes Down Ends His Insomnia the 17-year-old honky tonk or Town Tonight,” “After You've| record MI.-2206. On the other DAYTON, O. (UP) -— Jack singer doing ,“Down Hearted Gone” and “Muddy Water.

side, Warfield sings “Five Sea . Wayne Servies held open house Chanties,” arranged from tradi- this week at 2110 Northwestern: ° tional sources by Celius Dough- Ave. to introduce the new line of

Fiske doesn’t waste time counting Blues” sheep when he has insomnia. Instead, he spends his sleepless her records were to reach a total |

VOLUME IV-—In this set is the first Bessie-James P. Johnson duet “Preachin’ The Blues,” with ‘Back Water Blues” a companion

on her first recording

session. In the next few years

erty. They include “Riq Grande,” Motorola TV sets for which he is hours making fishing rods. In the of more than 6,000,000 and she : “Blow Ye Winds,” ‘Across the distributor. ! past 13 years, he has turned out was to be the highest-paid Negro Piece. There's also “Trombone Western Ocean,” “Mobile Bay” «phe prices,” he said with satis- Pit 400 rods. entertainer in the nation. Cholly eulogizing accompanist and “Shenandoah.” faction. “are terrifie.” E Mr. Fiske cites several advan- 2% Charlie Long Green, "Send Me 2 # = : ’ . J tages to his hobby: (1)) a saw, z to the ‘Lectric Chair,” “Empty COPLAND: EI SALON MEX- And he pointed out a 20-inch-} pocket knife, paint brush “and a VOLUME I — This includes Bed Blues,” “Shipwreck Blues,”

screen model that sells for the!

ICO, and Milhaud’s “La Creation : same price as last year’s 17-inch

du Monde” are two distinctive modern compositions that Colum- model. bia has recorded -on 10-inch LP The reduction is due, he said, to record ML-2203. Leonard Bern- & simplified chassis. stein, young American conductor, “A ten-inch model used ta have leads ‘the Columbia Symphony ten miles of wire in it,” he exOrchestra. through the Copland Plained. “Our engineers have work, and the Columbia Chamber Peen working to eliminate that Orchestra through the Milhaud rat's nest. The more simplified ¢omposition. The latter, whose sets don’t present such a servictitle means:“The €reation of the

ing problem World” is one of the earliest! “There are fewer tubes, but the works in which a composer of

set 13 more powerful, Some are pany claims eliminates up to 98 :e double- and triple-purpose tubes.” per cent of the glare, and includes a ST TE pe And with fewer tubes there are provision for adding ultra-high ceding Gerehwin's “Rhapsody in fewer sockets and connections and frequency reception when and if a Blue.” “Rl Salon Mexico” is a the set costs fewer dollars. And/transmitter begins operation here. ~ STs ire § 8 there are fewer resistors and ca- Prices range from $199 to $600. musical souvenir of Copland’s ——— visit to that country, and is built

pacitators, too. —— around authentic Mexican melo- ing out unnecessary parts

One of the new line 6f Motorolas. |

When the engineers were tak-

. con- Parents Want

dies. a tinued Mr. Servies, they also added B h B d . Si some innovations. One of these : RIMSKY - KORSAKOV: LE 5, 3.way switch. The switch can ot oys an

COQ P'OR SUITE is played bY pe get for usi > Sir Thomas Beecham and The tr 5 aaa He Girls, Says Survey Royal Philharmonic Orchestra on tance or in the fringe areas. © By Seiencp Service one side of Columbia 12-inch LP There has been some emphasis - NEW YORK, Jan. 5—The idea record MIL-4454. “The Golden on fringe area reception lately, that American parents prefer a Cockerell,” ts the French title is said Mr. Servies, but the sets son to a daughter is probably a translated, is a fantasy based an powered for it often were so pow- myth. The most common type Pushkin's dramatic poem, which erful that they distorted the pic- of sex preference among both

| few blisters” needed; (2) ‘sturdy Burma or Calcutta rod young cornetist then with while relaxing chair; {in extra money, {him go-to sleep.

abounds in sumptuous Oriental ture when used at normal distance

colors and sensuous melodies. The Suite consists of four sections, “King Dodon in His Palace,” “On the Battlefield,” “The Queen of

from the station. The switch, he said, fixes that. Motorola has “Glare Guard,”

continued the

a

Hi =

Lots to Say

4 gt as South America

which the com-

Shemakha” and “March.” On the other side of the same record we 8 find: a

8 «8 » ..FRANCK: LE CHASSEUR MAUDIT, which means “The Accursed Hunter.” This emi-

nently pictorial {and easy-to-foi-low music is baged on a ballad which tells the story of a huntsman who refused to pay attention - to a bell summoning him to St. Hubert's 8 Mass, and for this

Did Mexican | Indians Sail | From Indonesia?

By Seclence Service NEW YORK, Jan. 5—Voyagers from Indonesia and Indo-China may have “discovered” America by crossing the Pacific 700 years before Columbus and some 300 years before the Vikings. ‘This is the opinion of Dr. Gordon Ekholm, associate curator of anthropology of the American Museum of Natural History here.! He bases his opinion on the exist- | ence of marks of the culture of | Southeast Asia in Mexico and Cen-' tral America dating from about 700 A, D. Columns and balustrades with a serpent motif, found at Chichen! Itza in Mexico, he says, are al-|| most identical with columns and balustrades found in Java. Types of thrones and the manner in| which artists handled the Lotus § * motif are similar-too, he pointed ’ out. | Dr. Ekholm is not sure how the Southeast Asians got to what the| archeologists call “Middle Amer-| ica.” He points out that voyages were made Yrom India to Indonesia and Indo-China in ships which could carry 200 people and stay out of sight of land for 60) pi iy Syracuse to visit his days as far back as 400 A. D. itically ill fath His findings, he says, indicate STiticaly WM fainer. &

LESS SWIFT—Capt. John J. | Swift, one of the American | ilots recently held for ransom be the Hungarian government, weighs in a Syracuse hospital and’ finds himself slimmer as a result of Hungarian prison fare.

' get into trouble.

Lucky Discovery

mothers and fathers is for one child of each sex, a survey conducted by Drs. Jeanne E. Clare and Clyde V. Kiser, of the Milbank Memorial Fund, indicates.

Most couples are satisfied with the sex of the children they have, whether they are sons or daughters. Those who have one child state the sex of that child as the sex they prefer, ‘

About a third of the 693 couples who had children of only one sex, however,. indicatéd they had planned the birth of the last child because they wanted a child of the other sex. Thus parents of a large family of: all boys or all girls: may keep on having babies in the hope of having one of the other sex.

And of the 591 couples who already had at least one son and one daughter, nearly half of both husbands and wives gave this as a reason for not adding further to the size of their. families. :

Hubby Protected

MALDEN, Mass. (UP)—When a Medford man reported someone had jacked up. his automobile and removed - a wheel, police merely smiled and drove him home in a cruiser. They had been | notified previously by the man’s wife that she had seen him enter a tavern and removed the wheel | herself so he couldn't drive and

AsTHMACOUGHERS GiveThanks for

Tes, thousands who coughed and coughed with Bronchial Asthma and couldn't sleep, give thanks for their luck MENDAOO, That's because ACO is an | internal medicingé that works through the! blood thus Jeaching the lu

dubes. Also because usually wo

out thick, sticky, strangling mucus—then

discovery of

and bronchial so fast to help Nature thin, loosen and clean jf

you have freer breathing, coughing is allevisie ang) better sleep hus onoved. Qet under mote) pTaniee i tl Se a i and take 0) to y thousands who Anka | het lucky discovery of

2. antecedents in Middle Amer-| ica, but which are similar to traits/ found in" Southeast Asia. The archeologist believes there must have been various contacts over a period of years after 700 A. D.| The motifs, he thinks, have a sort | of Buddhist or Hindu character about them.

a “complex of traits” which have [F== :

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are all the tools Some of Bessie's earliest discs, “Long Road Blues” and a couple he can make a her chief accompanist a rising of others. Combined, the issue is lot of in a big easy Fletcher-Henderson’'s band, named Bessie for one listening. But it's (3) his handicraft brings Louis Armstrong. The titles are also one of the most masterful and (4) it helps stepping stones in jazz history, collections of a jazz era ever com- . “Down Hearted Blues,’ n ast. Louis pee.

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-:. PAGE 23°

HERO'S REWARD—Nathan Tate, 13, of Birmingham, won the Carnegie Medal for heroism by javivg a playmate from an oncoming train. He's shown here with F. R. Hodges, engineer, at the throttle of a diesel locomotive.

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