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Edible fils, 1974 
AGAIN the Illinois Audubon Society presents four full-color wildlife 
motion pictures during 1974. All are seen in the Simpson Theater of 
the Field Museum of Natural History, Roosevelt Road and Lake 
Shore Drive, Chicago. Outstanding naturalists appear as narrators. 
Feb. 3, 1974 — THE LIVING JUNGLE — by Greg McMillan 
Barro Colorado Island, in Lake Gatun in the Panama Canal Zone, 
has been completely protected by the Smithsonian Institution for 
long-term study of an unspoiled tropical jungle. Greg McMillan 
displays an incredible variety of animals: Agoutis, tamanduas, pacas, 
basilisk lizards, and with a telephoto lens, the jewelled birds, glit- 
tering insects, and the other denizens of the jungle canopy. Forget 
winter for an hour! 
Feb. 24, 1974 — SMALL WORLD — by Fran William Hall 
A professional photographer, explorer and wildlife lecturer for al- 
most 40 years, Fran Hall focuses his camera on the interplay of life 
between man and the small animals, especially the insects. Come 
see the beautiful and complex details of development, behavior and 
struggle for survival of the incredibly tiny animals that share our 
planet. 
March 17, 1974 — UPCOUNTRY UGANDA — 
by Jeanne & John Goodman 
You may have seen TV versions of Jeanne Goodman’s diary of a 
year in tropical East Africa with her children and husband, John, a 
naturalist and visiting professor of Zoology and Parasitology at 
Makerere University in Kampala. Now you can watch a new film 
story, five years in the making, that portrays the still abundant wild- 
life in a spectacular upland of national parks and lush, rolling 
plateaus between the mountains. 
April 7, 1974 — FOOTLOOSE IN NEWFOUNDLAND — 
| by Thomas A. Sterling 
Tom Sterling’s camera explores the eastern outpost of North 
America—its history, its people, and especially its wildlife. You'll 
watch the remnants of a 900-year-old Viking settlement—fishing 
for cod and Atlantic salmon—observe life at a whaling station— 
and roam through fresh and magnificently wild Terra Nova and 
Gros Morne Provincial Parks. This is a wildlife odyssey you will 
not want to miss. 
Members ADMITTED FREE at west entrance. Programs begin at 2:30 
p.m. each of the Sundays. The public is welcome. 
