From "The 1963 Mount Everest Story.** Lecturer 

 for the November 28th program Is on the right. 



FALL 

 LECTURES 



On People and Places 

 Around the World 



J. he fall lecture series for adults con- 

 tinues on Saturday afternoons during 

 November. The programs are given in 

 the James Simpson Theatre, beginning 

 at 2 :30 p.m. Reserved seats are held for 

 Museum Members until 2:25 p.m. Fol- 

 lowing is the complete schedule, with de- 

 scriptions of the November programs 

 (descriptions of the October programs 

 were published in last month's Bulle- 

 tin). 



October 3 



"Audubon's Wilderness: 



The River Years" 



Leonard Hall 



October 10 

 "Alone Across Asia" 



Robert Moran 



October 17 

 "Yugoslavia" 



J. Gerald Hooper 



October 24 

 "Arizona" 



Robert Davis 



October 31 

 "Hong Kong" 



Karl Robinson 



November 7 

 "Chile" 



Nicol Smith 



Viewers will welcome this delightful 

 opportunity to tour, with Nicol Smith, 

 one of the most progressive, yet charm- 

 ing, countries of the American conti- 

 nent. A thoroughly sophisticated trav- 

 eler, Smith has sought out just those 

 scenes of cultural and industrial life that 

 most people would like to explore. His 

 tour opens in the brilliant, modern city 

 of Santiago, then moves by helicopter 

 to the coast and the principal seaport, 

 Valparaiso. A trout-fishing trip in the 

 lake country provides a pleasant inter- 

 lude before we move to primitive Tierra 

 Del Fuego — Land of Fire, a name belied 

 by its chilling winds and cold. Here on 

 the southernmost tip of America we wit- 

 ness the spectacular break-up of a mas- 

 sive glacier. Then north to the high 

 country, land of llamas, where Lake 

 Chungara lies at an altitude of 13,800 

 feet. A look at three industrial areas 

 follows: Iquique, where we put out 

 to sea after sardines and anchovy and 

 catch shark as well; Chuquicamate, the 

 world's largest open pit copper mine; 

 and the Atacama Desert, where Chile's 

 white gold," nitrate, is found. 



November 14 

 "A Naturalist in Southern Africa" 



Cleveland P. Grant 



Angola, the Rhodesias, and Mozam- 

 bique — this is the territory. The sub- 

 ject? The magnificent spectacle of Afri- 

 can animal life. Cleveland Grant, a 

 noted wildlife photographer, took to 

 Africa all the skills gained from years of 

 experience in filming birds and big game 

 of the western United States, Canada, 

 and Alaska. The result is a filmed "bag" 

 that includes 40 species of birds; 20 vari- 

 eties of African antelope; scenes of hip- 

 po, rhino, zebra, giraffe, leopard, lion; 

 and some of the finest elephant films 

 ever to come out of Africa. It was in 

 the Rhodesias that Grant followed a 

 herd of hundreds of elephants in wilder- 

 ness along the Mozambique border. 

 There, too, he made movies on several 

 of the great game ranches — Buffalo 

 Range, Henderson Ranch, and Lochin- 

 var with its 17,000 lechwe. He visited 

 the famous bird concentration flats along 

 the Kafue River and filmed wildlife 

 along the Zambezi from Victoria Falls 

 to Kariba Dam. His final safari was 

 into a wild area of Mozambique, where 

 most of the big game species of Africa 

 {Continued on page 7) 



OCTOBER Page 5 



