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VOLUME 47 — NUMBER 30
Great Increase in Crime
Reported by FBI Chief
Serious crime in the United
States registered a 10 percent in
crease in volume in 1963 over 19-
62 according to the FBl’s annual
Uniform Crime Reports.
Figures made available by F
BI Director J. Edgar Hoover dis
closed the sharp trend last year
resulted primarily from crimes a
gainst property which had an
overall 11 percent rise. Larceny
SSO and over climbed 13 percent,
auto theft 11, burglary 9 and rob
bery 5.
These crimes comprise 92 per
cent of the total Crime Index of
fenses. Crimes against the per
son likewise showed an increase
of 5 percent as a group with ag
gravated assault up 6 percent and
forcible rape and murder 1 per
cent each. There were over two
and one-quarter million serious
crimes reported in 1963.
Mr. Hoover noted that the con
tinued upswing in crime was con
sistent in all areas led by the
suburban communities up 13 per
cent, while the cities averaged a
10 percent rise and rural areas
6 percent. Geographically, the
trend was uniform with the North
Central States up 6 percent, the
Western States 10, the Southern
States 12 and the Northeastern
States 13 percent.
When considered in relation to
our population increase, the FBI
Director pointed out that crime in
the United States is increasing 5
times faster than our population
growth. Since 1958 the Nation’s
population rise of 8 percent has
been outstripped by a 40 percent
increase in crime. In 1963 there
were 12 serious crimes and vic
tims for every 1,000 persons in
the national population.
The FBI figures disclosed that
during 1963, for the Nation as a
whole, there were 35 arrests for
all types of criminal acts per 1,-
000 inhabitants. In the cities the
arrest rate was 42 per 1,000, sub
urban area 19 and rural areas
recorded 15 arrests per 1,000 pop
ulation.
Volumewise, the number of city
arrests remained about the same
level as 1962; however, suburban
and rural areas each had a 6 per
cent increase in arrest activity.
Mr. Hoover said that the city
arrest total was substantially in
fluenced by a decrease in arrests
for the offenses against public or
der such as drunkenness, vagran
cy, disorderly conduct and the
like, while arrests for major
criminal activity were generally
up.
Mr. Hoover stated that police
arrests nationally for the serious
crimes rose 8 percent 1963 over
1962 which was one indicator of
law enforcement’s increased ac
tivity to meet the growing crime
problem.
During 1963 arrests of young
persons under 18 years of age
for criminal acts soared 11 per
cent. This was the fifteenth con
secutive year to register an in
crease. Since 1958 police arrests
of juveniles have increased twice
as fast as the young age popu
lation growth. For all criminal
acts these young offenders made
up 17 percent of all police arrests.
Persons under 18 were repre
sented in 8 percent of the arrests
for murder, forcible rape 18 per
cent, robbery 16 percent, aggra
vated assault 14 percent, burgla
ry 50 percent, larceny 51 percent,
and 63 percent of the auto theft
arrests. Mr. Hoover cautioned
that although arrests indicated
our young people contribute a
disproportionate share to the
crime counts nationally, only 4
out of each 100 young persons
actually become involved.
When comparing arrest rates,
it was found that young persons
in the 15 through 19 year age
group had the greatest frequency
of all population groups for the
crimes against property of bur
glary, larceny and auto theft. The
20-24 year age group had the
highest arrest rates for the
crimes of murder, aggravated as
sault and forcible rape, as well
as for robbery and narcotic vio
lations. The arrest rate for gam
bling was highest in the 30-34
year age group while fraud and
related arrests occurred most of
ten in the 25-29 year age group.
The FBI Director called atten
tion to the fact that 88 law en
forcement officers died in the
line of duty in 1963, 55 of them
victims of vicious killers. Since
1960 a total of 168 officers have
been murdered as they perform
ed their official tasks.
BRANTLEY ENTERPRISE
Brantley County — Land of Forest Products, Naval Stores, Tobacco, Livestock, Honey, Hunting, Fishing — and Progressive People.
ASC Committee
Elections
Are Announced
County and Community
Committeemen .who will ad
minister ASCS programs in
1965 will be elected by farm
ers in August, according to
an announcement by W. H.
Booth, Chairman of the Geor
gia Agricultural Stabilization
and Conservation State Com
mittee.
This year’s elections will be
held by mail. August 21 has
been set as the final date by
which ballots must be post
marked or personally deliver
ed by farmers. Ballots will be
mailed to all voters on record
by the ASCS County Office
on or before August 11.
Complete instructions will
accompany the ballots which
will describe how they are to
be marked and returned in
pre-addressed envelopes re
quiring no postage. Last year
Georgia farmers had a partici
pation of 73.3 percent in the
elections. Brantley County had
a participation of 80.3 percent.
The county committees now
serving will be responsible for
seeing that all phases of the
election process are properly
performed. This year, the slate
of nominees will include the
names of all persons nominat
ed by petition who are found
willing to serve and are eli
gible.
The community and county
committees now serving will
make additional nominations
necessary to complete the slate
for voting. Persons who are e
lected chairmen of the com
munity committees will serve
as delegates to the county con
vention to be held between
August 24 and 31 for the pur
pose of electing the county
committee. Newly elected
county and community com
mittees will take office on
September 1.
2 Negro Youths
Are Sentenced
For Burglary
Two Negro youths were sen
tenced by Judge Hodges Monday
after pleading guilty to burglary
and shoplifting at Waynesville on
July 6.
The two youths burglarized a
Negro store at Waynesville and
on the same day stole shirts by
shoplifting them at Harrison’s
Grocery, Waynesville. They were
caught at Brunswick when they
tried to sell the shirts.
The older, 17 years, was sen
tenced to 12 months for burglary
and seven for shoplifting. The
younger youth, 16, was put on
probation for two years.
The older boy was from Bruns
wick and the younger from Way
cross. Georgia law prohibits pub
lishing names of juvenile offend
ers.
Reminder Given
On Deadline for
Quarterly Taxes
The deadline for reporting and
paying income tax withheld and
Social Security taxes for the cal
endar quarter ending June 30,
1964, is July 31, according to A.
C. Ross, District Director of In
ternal Revenue in Atlanta.
Employers should use the pre
addressed Form 941 which they
received in the mail to report
their tax liability for the quarter
ending June 30. The return
should be mailed to District Di
rector, Internal Revenue Service,
Atlanta, Georgia.
“The depository receipts for the
first two months of the quarter
and the full amount of the taxes
for the third month should be in
cluded when you file Form 941,”
the Director stated.
About Vitamins
Vitamins are not special medi
cines, according to Miss Lucile
Higginbotham of the Extension
Service health department. She
says they are found in common
everyday foods. If the right varie
ty of foods are included in the
daily diet, a person will receive
the quota of vitamins needed by
a normal, healthy individual.
Negro Woman
Shot Through
Chest Monday
A Negro woman, Daisy Win
ston, was shot through the chest
by a Negro man, Sam Edwards,
in a house at Satilla Lumber
Company near Nahunta Monday
afternoon, July 20, it is reported
by Sheriff J. Walter Crews.
The Negro man ran away in
to the nearby woods and track
dogs were brought from Way
cross and Jesup. The dogs trail
ed through the woods until dark
without coming up with the fugi
tive.
About eight o’clock Sheriff
Crews and deputy Burden were
called to Lulaton by a report
that a strange Negro had been
seen there. As they drove to
ward Lulaton they saw a man
walking beside the highway and
invited him to ride with them.
As the stranger stepped into
the car the sheriff saw he was
a Negro and that he had a re
volver in his pocket. Sheriff
Crews grabbed the weapon and
placed the man under arrest. It
was the same Negro who had
done the shooting, the sheriff
said, and also stated that the
Negro said the woman tried to
shoot him and that she was shot
in the scuffle.
The revolver was a 38 “lemon
squeezer” Smith & Wesson, the
sheriff said.
The Negro woman was reported
in a serious condition at a Black
shear hospital.
Quarter Horse
Show Planned
In Waynesboro
On August 1, the annual Quart
er Horse Show will be held in
Waynesboro, Georgia. The show
will be held at Windy Hill Ranch
starting at 9:00 A. M. with halter
classes for registered horses. The
halter show will be free to specta
tors.
At 1:30 P. M. the performance
classes including roping, reining,
barrel racing, cutting and west
ern pleasure will get underway.
The highlight of the day will
be the youth events which will be
gin at 7:30 P. M. These classes
are for youngsters 18 years old
and under. The horses shown in
this division do not have to be
registered. Youth events will in
clude showing at halter, western
pleasure, western riding, reining,
barrel racing and pole bending.
A high point award will be
made to the youth winning most
places during the evening.
For further information con
tact Mrs. Bruce Selman, Rt. 1,
Box 128, Keysville, Ga. Food will
be available on the grounds
throughout the day provided by
the Burke County 4-H Club.
'Agriculture on
Trial' Is Title
Os WXGA Special
On Thursday, July 23, at
7:45, Channel 8 will present
a WXGA Special entitled
“Agriculture on Trial.”
The program was recorded
on videotape at the studios of
WGTV, The University of
Georgia non-commercial tele
vision station in Athens, and
is based on a play written by
Robert E. Lynn, teacher of
Vocational Agriculture at
Ware County High School.
The program was produced
by the Vo-Ag Students of
Ware County High School and
features Roland Brooks, of the
Agricultural Extension S er
vice, as host. Starring in the
fifteen-minute program are:
Jimmy Brown (clerk); Jimmy
Corbett (jury foreman); Rudy
Hodges (bailiff); Jimmy Lee
(defendent); Jerome Lee
(prosecuting attorney); Z. A.
and, Herbert Steedley (judge).
Music (defending attorney);
and, Herbert Steedley (judge).
All of the above named boys
were 4th year students of Vo
cational Agriculture at Ware
County High School. Mr. Lynn
and the boys traveled to Ath
ens to record the program.
The program defends agri
culture and maintains that it
is misunderstood. It also points
out the importance of agri
culture to our society today,
and shows how this country
would not exist without its
contribution.
The Brantley Enterprise, Nahunta, Ga., Thursday, July 23, 1964
Dock DePratter
Funeral Service
Held Monday
Funeral services were held
from the graveside in Hickox Ce
metery Monday afternoon, July
20, at 2:30 o’clock for Mr. Char
les Murdock (Dock) DePratter,
57, who passed away Tuesday,
July 14, in California, where he
had resided for the past seven
years, with the Rev. Cecil F.
Thomas conducting the rites in
the presence of a large number
of sorrowing relatives and friends.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Dorothy Sloan DePratter of Si
mi, Calif: one daughter, Mrs.
Louis James of Waldo, Fla; one
son, Kenneth DePratter of Simi,
Calif; three sisters, Mrs. J. B.
Smith of St. Simons Island, Mrs.
J. O. Strickland and Mrs. W. O.
Strickland, both of Nahunta; two
brothers, Melvin DePratter of Na
hunta and Lonnie DePratter of
Brunswick.
Several nieces, nephews and o
ther relatives also survive.
Serving as pallbearers were
Messrs. Dan Jacobs, George Dy
kes, R. B. Brooker, W. B. Har
ris, J. T. Royster and J. C Al
len.
The many beautiful floral of
ferings attested to the esteem
felt for the deceased
The family has the sympathy
of their many friends in their
bereavement.
The Chambless Funeral Home
of Nahunta was in charge of ar
rangements.
CRISP FARMER
AVERAGES TWO
BALES PER ACRE
A Crisp County cotton grow
er who often produces better
than two bales per acre is
setting an example of progres
sive cotton production, James
E. Jackson, agronomist of the
University of Georgia Exten
sion Service, said this week.
“Mr. M. D. Kennedy, Jr.,
has recognized that the key to
profit with cotton lies in high
production per acre,” the ag
ronomist said, “and his record
is proof that he is capitalizing
on this knowledge.”
Last year Mr. Kennedy pro
duced 1,150 pounds of lint —
about two and one-third bales
— per acre on his 62-acre al
lotment. His yield figures for
1957 through 1959 were 1,007,
1, 210 and 783 pounds of lint
per acre, giving him a four
year average of more than two
bales per acre.
“Mr. Kennedy followed the
College of Agriculture’s pro
duction recommendations to
the letter in 1963,” the agro
nomist said.
He planted the Auburn 56
variety, a recommended var
iety, at the rate of 20 pounds
of acid delinted seed per acre
in a skip-row pattern, plant
ing two rows and skipping two.
This provided a stand of five
plants per foot which did not
require chopping.
He limed his soil before
planting and then used 800
pounds of a 5-10-15 fertilizer
per acre as seedbed fertilizer.
After the crop was up and
growing he sidedressed it with
64 pounds of nitrogen per acre.
Mr. Kennedy used a pre
emergence herbicide which re
duced his cultivations to three.
He sprayed the crop 15 times
with Toxaphene - DDT and
methyl parathion to control
insects. The crop was harvest
ed with a mechanical picker.
Vegetable Queen?
The old cowpea is fast becom
ing the queen of vegetables in
Georgia. Extension Horticulturist
F. B. Cates says many changes
have occurred since peas were
introduced by slave traders who
used them to feed their cargos of
human misery. The old cowpeas
became field peas, and now a
new name — Southern peas —
seems even more appropriate.
Tips for Picnickers
Love that picnic site - but
leave it litter-free and inviting
for the next group that want
to use it. Sandwich wrappers,
melon rinds, paper plates, nap
kins and other picnic leavings
should always be put in a
proper receptacle. “Police” the
picnic area so that neither
litter nor disorderly arrange
ment of tables and benches
can spoil its beauty.
Farm Safety
Spotlighted
This Week
National Farm Safety Week ac
tivities for this year started at
the White House, and through the
Cooperative Extension Service of
the U. S. Department of Agricul
ture, are expected to reach ev
ery farm and rural home in A
merica.
President Lyndon B. Johnson
has proclaimed the week begin
ning July 19 as National Farm
Safety Week, and has called up
on all Americans to observe it
and its theme, “Safer American
Families Everywhere.”
Willis E. Huston, Extension en
gineer at the University of Geor
gia, is coordinator of the special
week’s activities in this state.
“Our purpose,” Mr. Huston
said, “is be to draw attention to
the rural accident situation and
promote intensive, year-round ac
cident-prevention programs in ru
ral communities all over the
state.”
Sponsored jointly by the Nation
al Safety Council and USDA,
Farm Safety Week programs try
to cut down on the accidents
that kill 8,700 ana injure 800,000
farm residents in the United
States each year.
“The dollar cost of farm acci
dents,” Mr. Huston said, “is 1.5
billion.” He added that the grief,
loneliness, and pain that accidents
bring cannot be measured.
The Extension engineer contin
ued that most accidents involve
human failure — improper atti
tudes, carelessness, lack of at
tention to rules and regulations,
and many others.
During Farm Safety Week,
county Extension workers, farm
organizations, and other groups
help prevent accidents by giving
farmers and their families the
facts and pointing out precautions
they can take.
Each day of the week will em
phasize a special theme. The
theme for Sunday, July 19, was
“Reverence for Life.” This was
followed on Monday with “Safety
Begins at Home.”
Mr. Huston said special pro
motion were to be placed on agri
cultural chemicals (Tuesday) and
recreation safety (Saturday) this
year. Other areas to get special
attention during the week are
falls, highway safety, and machi
nery.
Personals
Misses Jo and Dollie Warren
of Jacksonville visited their moth
er, Mrs. Amos Warren of Nahun
ta the past weekend.
The Waynesville softball team
beat the Hortense team 37 to 0
in a recent game.
Roy T. Jefferies, gunner’s mate
seaman, USN, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Plas Jefferies of Nahunta,
participated in an operation call
ed “Exercise Bird Dog” off the
coast of California while aboard
the attack aircraft carrier USS
Ranger.
Kenneth N. Lewis of Nahunta,
is one of 42 Presbyterian College
students named to the Dean’s
List for the second semester of
the 1963-64 session. Lewis quali
fied for the PC Dean’s List with
an average above 3.20 in a pos
sible 4.00 grade system. A grad
uate of Nahunta High School, he
is the son of Mrs. Ruby Harris.
Mary Beth Loyd is visiting her
cousin Susan Loyd at Macon this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Broome vis
ited Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Barnes
in Swainsboro, Ga. last weekend.
Miss Eppie Roberson arrived
last weekend to be home for a
while for the summer. She is an
instructor in Miami schools.
Palmetto Church
Revival Starts
Thursday Night
The Palmetto Church of God
will begin a revival meeting
Thursday night, July 23, with Rev.
Buddy Brown as the evangelist.
Services will begin each night
at 7:30. The meeting will con
tinue 10 days. Rev. Sabord Woods
is the pastor of the church. Ev
eryone is invited to attend all
the services.
FARM PRODUCTION
United States farm produc
tion in 1963 was 4 percent a
bove the previous record, ac
cording to the North Dakota
State University College of
Agriculture.
Bachlott Church
To Observe
Homecoming Day
Bachlott Church of God will ob
serve Homecoming Day Sunday,
July 26.
Preaching services will be held
at 11:00 in the morning, with
preaching by the pastor Rev.
Loyd Davis.
Dinner will be served on the
church grounds at the noon hour.
Visiting ministers will be present
and special singing will feature
the services.
Everyone is cordially invited
to attend and take part in the
homecoming program.
Family Reunion
Held at George
Loyd Home
A family reunion was held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. George
Loyd the weekend of July 18-19.
Mrs. Eva Mae Riner of Tifton,
Ga., arrived Saturday, with her
daughter Mrs. M. J. Perkins and
family of Columbus, Ga.
Other relatives present were
the L. E. Riner family of Ocala,
Fla., the G. D. Riner family of
Orlando, Mrs. Dorothy Riner and
children and Mr. and Mrs Der
yck Perkins and Laurie, all of
Tifton, Mr. and Mrs. David Fra
zier of Milledgeville, Mr. and
Mrs. William Jarrell and family
of Manchester.
Friends present were the Al
fred Thomas family, Dalton
Brand of Hickox, Rev. Marvine
Smith, Homerville, and Allen
Brooker, Yulee, Fla.
A chicken barbecue dinner was
served to the 53 people present.
280 Million
Pine Seedlings
Are Planted
ATLANTA, GA. — Pulp and pa
per companies and pulpwood sup
pliers were rcrponsible for plant
ing more than 279.5 million pine
seedlings in the South during the
1963-64 planting season, accord
ing to a report by the Southern
Pulpwood Conservation Associa
tion, Atlanta.
H. J. Malsberger, general man
ager of SPCA, explained that the
plantings were part of the indus
try’s sustained program to con
vert idle lands into productivity
and include 23.7 million trees
given to individual landowners.
The number of seedlings plant
ed in the current season, he con
tinued, was approximately 1.5
million higher than the total
planted in the 11-state Southern
area in the 1962-63 season.
In addition, he said, 56,767 a
cres of land in the area were
direct seeded in pines, showing a
slight gain over the 53,402 acres
direct seeded last year.
Nahunta Church
Os God Begins
Revival Monday
The Nahunta Church of God will
begin a revival meeting Monday
night, July 27, with Rev. W. K.
Livingston of Waycross doing the
preaching.
Rev. Jack E. Barber is pastor
of the church.
Services will begin each night
next week at 7:45. The meeting
will continue through the week.
Everyone is cordially invited to
attend the services.
CARD OF THANKS
We, the DePratter family wish
to express our sincere thanks to
everyone who was so considerate
of us at the death of our loved
one, Dock DePratter.
We appreciate the many ex
pressions of sympathy, the love
ly flowers and the covered dish
es.
May God’s blessings be with
you.
Sincerely,
The DePratter family.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Regan Morgan of
Jacksonville, Fla., announce a
baby boy bom Wednesday, July
15, in a Jacksonville hospital. The
baby weighed seven pounds one
ounce and was named Curtis Re
gan. Mrs. Morgan is the former
Marilyn Hickox of Hoboken.
OFFICIAL ORGAN BRANTLEY COUNTY AND CITY OF NAHUNTA
South Georgia Tobacco
Market Opens July 29
Gun Club Is
Organized in
Brantley County
A Brantley County Gun Club
has been organized, under the
sponsorship of the sheriff’s de
partment, J. Walter Crews, sher
iff.
The board of directors of the
club are J. Walter Crews, chair
man; Ted Strickland, John V.
Smith, Ben D. Ruling, Delma Her
rin and Sherman Tomlinson. R.
D. Smith is secretary-treasurer.
The purpose of the gun club is
to teach the proper use of guns,
prevent accidents in handling
guns, and otherwise maintain
proper control and use of fire
arms.
Plentiful Beef Is
Wise July Choice
Beef continues plentiful through
out the Southeast, reports the U.
S. Department of Agriculture’s
Marketing Service, and July meal
planners will find it a wise choice
for indoor and outdoor fare.
USDA offers these ideas and
recipes for beef main course
fare:
For special occasion dinners,
serve an elegant standing rib
roast. Select a 2,3, or 4 rib
roast, and be sure the chine bone
has been removed, for easier
carving. Prepare for the oven by
sprinkling generously with salt
and pepper.
Place the roast on rack in an
open roasting pan with the fat
side up. Insert a meat therometer
so the bulb reaches the center of
the thickest part. Be sure the
thermometer doesn’t rest on bone
or in fat;
Roast in a slow oven, 300 to
325 degrees, until the thermomet
er indicates the meat is suffi
ciently cooked. The thermometer
will register 140 degrees for rare;
160 degrees for medium, and 170
degrees for well-done.
If no meat thermometer is a
vailable, allow 20 to 25 minutes
per pound for rare; 27 to 30
minutes for medium; and 32 to
35 minutes for well-done.
Take care not to use a cover
over the roast or to add any li
quid during cooking. Cuts used
for this dry heat form of cookery
are tender-meated and do not re
quire "steam” during the cooking
process to soften the connective
tissues.
To carve a standing rib roast,
first place the cooked roast on a
platter so that the ribs are to
the side, with the meaty portion
on the platter. This provides a
solid base for carving.
Next, insert the carving fork
between the two top ribs. (If the
carver is right-handed, the ribs
will be to the left. The left-hand
ed carver should have the ribs
on the right side of the platter.)
Using a sharp knife, start on
the fat side and carve across the
grain to the rib bone, to loosen
the slice. Be sure to cut close to
the bone to make the largest serv
ings possible. Slide the knife back
under the cut slice, steady the
slice with the fork, and lift to the
side of the platter or onto the
serving plate. Continue in this
fashion until enough slices have
been cut to serve the family. The
thickness of the slices will be de
termined by individual prefer
ence.
To keep a standing rib roast
from drying out, it’s best to cut
just enough slices to meet serv
ing needs.
For the outdoor chef, onion
burgers are hard to beat during
July. For 6 burgers, combine 1%
pounds ground beef, 1 teaspoon
salt, and ¥< teaspoon pepper.
Shape into 12 thin patties. Brown
1% cups chopped onion in 2 table
spoons butter or margarine, and
add to the onions 2 teaspoons
each horseradish and prepared
mustard, and % teaspoon salt.
Spread onion mixture over 6 pat
ties, and top with remaining pat
ties.
Press edges of meat together
to hide onion filling. Chill, then
broil on outdoor grill until done,
as desired. Serve in split, but
tered buns.
Subscription Price
and Tax
Inside county $2.58
Outside county, in state $3.09
Outside state $3.00
The South Georgia tobacco mar
ket will open for its 46th selling
season next Wednesday, July 29,
with prospects for a fair crop
in most sections of the leaf belt.
Because of weather conditions,
the crop is about two weeks late
in most places. Early rains de
layed the crop, then a dry sea
son, followed by July rains, fur
ther delayed maturing and pick
ing.
The market opening is about a
week later than last year. Brant
ley County’s tobacco crop is spot
ted, with good tobacco in some
areas and damaged leaf in other
areas. The crop as a whole is
believed average to good.
The warehouses at Blackshear
and Waycross will begin receiv
ing tobacco Monday, July 27.
Brantley tobacco growers sell
both in Blackshear and Way^oss.
Growers are strongly hotxig
that prices of the leaf will hoft^
up at least as high as last year.
TV Schedule
WXGA
Channel 8, Waycross
THURSDAY, July 23
6:30 —What’s New, Backyard
Safari, How It Began, and Tell
Me Why
7:00 — Growing South, Yard
and Garden: Retaining Walls
7:30 — A Point of View, The
University of the Seven Seas,
Host, Dr. Robert Clute, Univer
sity of Georgia
7:45 — Agriculture on Trial, A
special program presented by the
Ware County Vocational Agricul
ture Students
8:00 — Circus
8:30 — Picture Window on Fam
ily Recreation, Golf
8:45 — Ingredients of Dance
9.00 — Photography the Inci
sive Art (Beginning series)
9:30 — Counter-Attack, The
thrilling and inspiring story of a
man’s dedication to human wel
fare.
10:00 — Mythology, Greek My
ths
FRIDAY, July 24
6:30 — What’s New, Backyard
Safari, How it Began, and Tell
Me Why
7:00 — Growing South, Home
Economic Careers
7:30 — University News
7:45 — British Calendar
8:00 — At Issue
8:30 — The Passing Parade,
The Story of Alfred Nobel
9:00 — Turn of the Century
9:30 — Short Stories of Saki,
The Works of H. H. Munro
MONDAY, July 27
6:30 — What’s New, Backyard
Safari, How It Began, and Tell
Me Why
7:00 — Growing South, Ag En
gineering and Insect Control
7:30 — Portrait of Japan
8:00 — A Paradise on Earth,
An examination of the great re
ligious communities in India
9:00 — Project Hope, A narra
tion by Bob Considine
9:30 — Great Music, Alfred
Wallenstein leads the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra
TUESDAY, July 28
6:30 — What’s New, Backyard
Safari, How It Began, and Tell
Me Why
7:00 — Growing South, Hie In
sect Siamese Twins
7:30 — Silents, Please! Lilac
Time, Gary Cooper stars in the
silent classic about a British fli
er during World War I
8:00 — Folk Festival, Stan and
Dell in Partnership
8:30 — Os People and Politics
9:00 — Cinema, Dr. Jekyll and
Mr. Hyde, The film stars Spen
cer Tracy, Lana Turner and In
grid Bergman
WEDNESDAY, July 29
6:30 — What’s New, Backyard
Safari, How It Began, and Tell
Me Why
7:00 — Growing South, Forest
Diseases
9:00 — Cultures and Continents,
A new series of programs ex
ploring the cultural patterns of
Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin
America (Beginning Series)
9:30 — Great Music, Walter
Hendl conducts the Chicago Sym
phony Orchestra
7:30 — Scored for Three, The
University of Georgia Trio, Ed
win Gerschefski, Pianist; Leo
nard Felberg, Violinist; and Eck
hart Richter