FILMS, PRESS, AND RADIO ON THE EXPEDITION 



While the singing of 



the crowd on the shore rose to 

 ecstatic heights, 



. . .the priests performed 

 the ceremonial slaughtering 

 of the ox. 



From the crocodile feast 

 on Madagascar. 



of financing it. Then Dr. Bruun would give a talk about its work, and 

 this would be followed by questions. Soon the next party would be expected 

 and the first would be tactfully passed on to the laboratory, where a few 

 young zoologists would explain our most popular rarities. 



Meanwhile, we would be talking to reporters from the local broadcasting 

 service and television service if there was one, or making appointments 

 with the producers of newsreels. Cables would be connected up to record- 

 ing vans, microphones carried about all over, and film cameras would 

 whir as we took animals out of jars of formalin and demonstrated the 

 luminous organs of fishes. Dr. Bruun would be fetched to the microphone. 

 We would make sound effects for use in feature programmes, dig out 

 gramophone records for Danish musical programmes, and some of us 



