Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 8—THE BULLETIN, September 20, 1958
Pilgrims Visit Fatima
"To Jesus Through His
Immaculate
(By Hi, Rev. Msgr. T. James
McNamara)
Rome was now but a wistful
memory — wistful yet soul-
stiring. It is a panoramic picture
that this memory brings to mind
— a sweep of ruins tells a story
of many centuries before Christ;
a sweep of buildings and monu
ments that eloquently tells the
story of the conquest by Christ
of this city of the ancient Cae
sars. Dominating this panoramic
picture stands a frail figure,
Pius XII, whose radiant and
charming personality provides
the total scene'.
Not too long in flight our Pil
grimage party was soon over
Portugal and deplaning in Lis
bon, Portugal’s beautiful capital
city, Lisbon, we found, was re
miniscent of Rome, because it,
too, is buili on seven hills. It is
a remarkably beautiful city and
we can readily subscribe to the
estimate of those who would
reckon it the most beautiful city
in all the world. What an eye-
satisfying use the city has made
of pastel shades, and these colors
are the more esthetically pleas
ing by reason of their freshness.
We were told that property
owners in Lisbon are required
to paint the exterior of their
buildings at least once every
seven years. Whether or not this
be true, the citizens of Lisbon,
in their evident prideful main-_
tenance of their properties,
have created a facade for their
city which supports its enviable
claim to being the world’s most
beautiful city.
Our party was not so much
in Lisbon to view its beauty or
to experience its charm but
rather because of its added dis
tinction of being close to Fatima.
Fatima, a name which strikes
a responsive chord throughout
the world since the appearance
of Our Lady there on May 13,
1917; yet a name that seems
strikingly in conflict with the
nomenclature of Portugal. And
it is, because its history is that
of the invader who came to
conquer but. was conquered. The
name is of Arab origin, for at
one time the Arabs overran
Portugal. Fatima was the daugh
ter of an Arab chief. She had
been taken prisoner by some
Portuguese knights, one of
whom married her after she had
become a Christian. After her
death, her name was given to
one of her husband’s estates —
a name now so intimately part
of Portugal that to mention it is
to think of the Country itself.
The morning following our
arrival in Lisbon, May 7, saw
our party on its way to Fatima
by motorcoach. It was a com
paratively long journey but an
eventful one. Lisbon stretched
out before us; the broad Tagus
River distracted us by its majes-
tis flow, and the country-side
was picturesque with windmills
dotting the landscape and acres
and acres of cork trees held our
attention. As we moved on to
ward Fatima the country-side
became more rugged and its
ruggedness was emphasized by
frequently appearing stone
fences of marble remnants,
which in cross-quilt design
marked farm from farm. Unlike
Lourdes, which Our Lady had
chosen for her visits with Ber
nadette Soubirous, Fatima at
the time of Our Lady’s visits
with Lucy Santos and her cou
sins, Jacinto and Francisco
Marto, was a wild, desolate
place, left to the rocks that
made its soil infertile. Tremen
dously impressive, as we made
our way, were the numerous
pilgrims on foot with packs on
their backs, making the five day
journey from Lisbon to be pres
ent at Fatima for the ever-
memorable May 13.
Our party arrived at Fatima
about now. First thought was on
Mass, which Father Bourke, Fa
ther Deimel, Father Daly and I
looked hopefully to celebrate at
the Shrine. We were not to be
disappointed; Falher Daly said
Mass in the Chapel of the Ap
paritions, Father Bourke, Fa
ther Deimel and I in the beauti
ful Basilica, whose spotless
white walls suggested the
chasteness so dear to the Im
maculate Heart of Our Lady.
Following Mass we lingered
longingly on the vast esplanade
that serves as a sort of wall-to-
wall concrete-carpeted approach
to the Basilica. We did some
shopping in the unobtrusive re
ligious goods stores which bor
der the esplanade and then
studied more intimately the de
tails of the esplanade or plaza.
Looking out from the per-
Mother
spectivq of the esplanade toward
the Basilica, we saw the beauti
ful marble piece of the Angel
of Fatima, which in its place
ment at the corner of the Basi
lica tower made us mindful of
the angelic visitations the chil
dren had experienced between
Spring and Autumn of the year
1916. How close Heaven seemed
as we recalled those visitations
of the angels to Lucy, Jacinta
and Francisco! How much a
part of Fatima seemed our
Cathedral Saturday evening
novena, when, looking up at the
Angel of Fatima, depicted in
marble, there re-echoed the
words of the Angel of Peace
heard weekly in the Cathedral,
“My God, I believe, I adore, I
hope and I love you.” Especially
heart buoyant was the memory
of the three children kneeling
down with the angel, as
Heaven’s messenger taught them
this prayer and then broke the
Host of the Eucharistic Christ to
communicate them with the
Body and Blood of Mary’s Son,
urging them to make reparation
for the sins of ungrateful men
and thus console their God. How
fittingly God prepared these
little ones for the startling
events which were to follow
from May to October, 1917.
We visited again the Chapel
of the Apparitions, which, like
an unpolished gem, graces a
spot on the esplanade off to the
right of the giant Basilica. More
forcefully than when we made
our way into the Basilica for
Mass was the chiding that went
on within ourselves as we real
ized that without end there was
a constant procession of pil
grims on their knees making
their way around the Chapel.
The esplanade spread out be
fore us and we were not at all
surprised to learn that at times
a million or more people had
gathered on its vast expanse in
tribute to Our Lady of Fatima.
Regretfully we reflected that our
visit was on May 7 and not on
May 13, for evident perparations
were underway for the unveil
ing of the American Dominican’s
statue of Our Lady of Fatima,
as modelled by him under the
watchful eyes of Lucy, who
alone survives of the three chil
dren who witnessed the appari
tions. Inquiring later as to the
number who were in attendance
on May 13. subsequent to our
visit, we were told there were
600,000 or more assembled on
the esplanade.
Just off the Chapel of the
Apparitions we saw the ever
green oak, which had been
planted to replace the tree in
whose branches Our Lady had
appeared to the children. Long
since piety in its avid search
for relics had destroyed the
orginal tree. In the center of
the vast esplanade we stood in
admiration of the golden statue
of the Sacred Heart of Jesus,
which seemed to rise out of
the miraculous fountain which
centers the vastness of the es
planade. As we stood in awe
and admiration, again the age
old truth came to mind that the
way to Jesus is through His
Immaculate Mother.
Leaving the immediate en
virons of the Basilica with its
captivating vestiges of Heaven,
we made our way to the Dom
inican Hoste where we were
served a delectable meal. The
meal was embellished by the
running narrative of an Ameri
can Nun, now stationed at the
Dominican Convent. At this
time, too, we met Father Mc-
Glynn, the American Dominican,
who was in Fatima to erect
the statue which he had
modelled under the direction of
Lucy.
There is a newness to Fatima
which speakes eloquently of re
cent events; a newness that
spells out the miraculous, for
here where once there was a
rugged and rocky area, long
since abandoned to its rocks
and infertile soil, there are
countless structures, pleasantly
designed and all in their own
way telling the story of Our
Lady and her chosen little com
panions, Lucy, Jacinta and
Francisco.
Back in the motorcoach, our
trip to Lisbon was made event-
fu by a stop at the great Gothic
Abbey of Batalha, founded in
1388 by King John I of Portugal,
in thanksgiving for his victory
over Spaniards at the Battle of
Aljubarrota. Here in this exqui
sitely designed temple, dedi
cated to Our Lady of Victories,
we thought we saw something
that was reminiscent of Canter-
PASTOR, PARISHIONERS OF
FAR NORTH MISSION TRAVEL
120 MILES FOR SUNDAY MASS
By Father John T. O'Toole
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
FORT McPHERSON, North
west Territories — People who
regard a 15-minute car ride to
attend Mass as a hardship
should consider the weekly
problem of the pastor of St.
John’s mission here and two of
his parishioners.
They have to travel 120 miles
among them every Sunday.
Father Gilbert Levesque, O.
M. I., comes 60 miles from Holy
Name of Mary mission in Arc
tic Red River. His weekly jour
ney takes him down the Mac
kenzie and up the Peel River
by boat.
Coen Kiewit DeYoung, a Hol
lander who joined the Church in
Venezuela, and Don Basso, a
Canadian, come another 60
miles by helicopter from Sum
mit Lake. Fort McPherson is a
village of the Loucheux or
“Cross-Eyes,” the northernmost
tribe of Arctic Indians.
When the two oil geologists
from Summit Lake move on to
other fields of exploration, Fa
ther Levesque will have his
congregation here cut down to
10 persons.
But having his flock reduced
by one-sixth will not dampen the
bury’s great Cathedral. This
observation was confirmed when
we learned later that John’s
queen was an English princess,
who, tradition has it, imported
English craftsmen to assist in
rearing this magnificent church
in Our Lady’s honor. Its
cloisters are literally lacework
in stone and gave us the feeling
that Canterbury, save for
Gramner and Company, would
have proved more beautiful and
more enchanting.
Batalha with its dedication to
Our Lady of Victories was a
fitting climax to our two weeks
Pilgrimage under the patronage
of Our Lady of Lourdes. I am
sure that every member of our
Pilgrimage Party, reflecting
back on the events that tran
spired between Shannon Air
port in Ireland and Portela Air
port in Portugal, experiences a
sense of triumph in the decision
which incorporated them into
the Lourdes Pilgrimage of the
Diocese of Savannah.
It was with a great reluctance
that, we came to the end of our
Pilgrimage, for Lisbon on its
return meant that most of our
party before the day was done
would be on their way back to
the United States and home. It
was with a sense of victory that
Father Bourke and I, accom
panied by Father Daly, made
our way from Portela Airport
back to our hotel in Lisbon.
Never having led a Pilgrimage
before, Father Bourke and I over
the months of planning had had
many misgivings. We were not
too sure of ourselves, even as
we left Idlewild Airport, New
York, Tuesday evening, April
22. Confidence came quickly
when the symphonic beauty of
Ireland’s variable shades of
green blended out party to
gether into an harmonious
whole. We were anxious that
each member of our party
should share the enthusiasm
that was ours in planning the
Pilgramage. The Marian Shrine
of the Irish country-side proved
the beginning of a lovely chain,
forged as it were by Our Lady
and binding us together in a
shared sentiment. Link by link
the chain as we visited shrine
after shrine in the numerous
countries covered by our Pil
grimage plan. It was as if Our
Lady were with us from Shan
non in Ireland to Lisbon in
Portugal; it was as if her in
visible presence guided our
steps and moved our hearts and
minds with a single purpose.
Mother that she is, the thought
of her drew our party of sixteen
together under a sort of familial
banner and that banner bore the
name SAVANNAH.
As we conclude this series
we wish to acknowledge our
gratitude to His Excellency;
Bishop McDonough, under
whose patronage we travelled
and whose generous consent
made possible the lovely Marian
chain which bound us together
with a single sentiment.
As Lourdes and its lovely
Domaine of Our Lady become
but a memory we are thrilled
by the knowledge that all who
visit Lourdes and will linger
long enough to stop and read
will know devotion and grati
tude to Our Lady. Even though
our Pilgrimage is over, its mem
ory is perpetuated at Lourdes,
for on the walls of the crypt of
its beautiful Basilica there is
spelled out on a marble tablet
the name SAVANNAH.
missionary zeal of the Oblate
priest. If the hard working Fa
ther Levesque can get the Lou
cheux, many of whom are fall-
en-away Catholics, to imitate
his two ‘copter’ parishioners, he
will be well on his way to re
storing the Fort McPherson mis
sion to its pristine glory.
Started back in I860, the
mission was once the scene of a
mass baptism of 65 persons, but
after it was moved to Arctic
Red River in 1895, many of the
faithful drifted away. In 1934 it
was reopened by Bishop Joseph
Trocellier, O.M.I., Vicar Apos
tolic of the Arctic Missions of
the MacKenzie, and is slowly
making a comeback.
Though rebuilding a lost faith
is slow work, Father Levesque
can recall many encouraging in
stances where oil people and
geographical survey men from
“outside” have made notable
sacrifices to attend Mass in the
wilderness.
He recalls a surveyor who was
unable to make it into the set
tlement for Mass in the morn
ing and presented himself at the
mission in the late afternoon
and asked to receive Commun
ion.
Even if the “Cross-eyes” con
tinue to remain outside the
Church, Fort McPherson may
still develop into an important
center of Catholicism.
Though located just 100 miles
south of the ice floe ridden
Beaufort Sea and 70 miles north
of the Arctic Circle — on the
135th meridian which lies over
1,000 miles west of Los Angeles
— Fort McPherson is the center
of an extensive search for
“Black Gold.”
It is also on the crossroads to
the new state of Alaska. Summit
Lake where the two geologists
are based is on the continental
divide of the Richardson Moun
tains, which are an extension of
Alaska’s Brooks range.
Father Levesque has high
hopes that the trickle of traf
fic through his “midnight sun”
mission will one day come to
resemble the onrushmg of the
MacKenzie that forms the “back
yard” of his home base here at
Arctic Red River.
Meanwhile he counts heavily
on the weekly whirly-bird load
of passengers from Summit
Lake to swell his meager flock
at f ort McPherson.
Record Enrollment 1
Diocesan Schools
(Continued from Page 1)
opened an eighth grade. Up
through last year, the only
eighth grade in Macon was for
girls at Mount DeSales. Now
Mount DeSales accomodates
girls in grades 9 through 12,
and St. Joseph’s has the eighth
grade boys as well as girls.
Present plans call for the gradu
al extension, of Mt. DeSales fa
cilities to serve all of Macon’s
Catholic high school students.
Commenting on the record
enrollment, Father John Cuddy,
Diocesan Superintendent of
Schools said, “It is interesting to
note that almost half of the stu
dents in the diocesan school sys
tem are enrolled in the twelve
schools in Chatham County —
3.624.” Father Cuddy noted that
since the new eight room addi
tion to Blessed Sacrament
School in Savannah has not yet
been completed, the increased
enrolled at this school entails
temporary double sessions and
Saturday sessions for its grades,
5, 6, and 7. It is expected that
at least part of the new addition
will be ready for use sometime
next month.
Kind acts are stepping stones
to contentment and happiness.
DEANERY
MEETING
OCT. 5TH
AUGUSTA — The Fall
Luncheon Meeting of the
Augusta Deanery Council of
Catholic Women will be held
on Sunday, October 5, at 1
p. m., at the Elks’ Home, 519
Greene St.
Reservations for the lunch
eon should be made with the
parish presidents, not later
than October 2. A report on
the National Convention will
be given at this meeting.
A Dialog Mass will be of
fered at St. Joseph’s Church,
preceding the meeting.
Luncheon reservations are
$1.50 each.
NATIONAL LEGION OF DECENCY
A moral estimate of current entertainment feature motion pictures prepared under the direction of the New York Office of
the National Legion of Decency with the cooperation of the Motion Picture Department of the International Federation of
Catholic Alumnae.
CLASS A-Section I—Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Buchanan Rides Alone—Col, Captain From Koepemck (Ger.)—DCA Davy—MGM
Saga of Hemp Brown—U-i Trial- at the Vatican—Ellis
Ambush at Cimarron Pass-r—Fox
Apache Territory—Col.
Around the World in 80 Days—UA
Attack of the Puppet People—Amt. Inti.
Bad Man’s Country—War.
Big Beat—U-I
Bridge on the River Kwai—Col.
Gamp Deli’s Kingdom (Br.)—Rank
Cinerama Soutn Seas Adventure—Stan
ley Warner.
Cole Younger, Gunfighter—A A
Country Music Holiday—Para.
Cowboy—Col.
Damn Citizen—U-I
Dangerous Exile (Br.)—Rank
Desert Hell—Fox
Diamond Safari—Fox
Dunkirk—MGM
Escape from Red Rock—Fox
Escapade in Japan—U-I
Flaming Frontier—Fox
Fort Massacre—UA
From Hell to Texas—Fox
Ghost of the . China Sea—Col.
Gideon of Scotland Yard—Col.
Gift of Love—Fox
Golden Age of Comedy—DCA
Handle With Care—MGM
Hell’s Five Hours—AA
High Flight—Col.
riong Jxong Aitair—AA
Flow to iviurcier a Rich Uncle-—Col.
international Gounterreiters—Rep.
James Dean Story—-War.
Joe Daxota—u-i
Last of me Fast Guns—Col.
Le t s itocK Got.
Manhunt m the Jungle—War.
man from Goas Gountry-—A A
lviarceiirio—mviPO ,
Marx of the Hawk—U-I
MatcnmaKer—r-ara.
Merry Andrew—iviGM
Missouri traveler—jtsuena Vista
Mustang—U A
No Time for Sergeants—War.
Octet—GU Pictures
Old Man and tne Sea—War.
One That uot Away (Br.)—Rank
Paradise Ragoon (Aum. onrichton)—Col.
r'aris rioliaay—UA
Proud Rebel—Buena Vista
Pursuit ot Grat topee—Rank
Quantrilie Rainers—AA
Rawnide Trail—AA
Rising of tne Moon—War.
Roex-a-nye Baby—Para.
Rooney tBr.)—Rank
Run Silent, Run Deep—UA
St. Dolus mues—rara.
street of Darnuess—Rep.
Seven riUis or Rome—iviGM
Sueepman—MGM
Siena naron—rex
smney Grets A oun—Fox
snow lire—a A
Space cnuaien—Para.
Spy in me say-—a a
Story of ivraniiina—War.
stoiy ot vicKie—Buena Vista
summer Love—U-f
Fare ot Two Gities (Br.)—Rank
TanK rorce—-Cot.
Tarzan's r ight ror Life—MGM
Ten wommanuments, The—Bara.
Three Brave Men—rox
Thundering Jets—rox
Time dociv—DcA
Toughest Guy m Tombstone—UA
Unuerwater Warrior—MGM
Up in smoxe—AA
Waite riumress—Am. Inti.
■White Wilderness—Buena Vista
Wild Heritage—u-I
■Windjammer—Natl Theatres
Vvoit Dog—r ox
Young Dand—Buena Vista
CLASS A—Section II—-Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents
Hunters, The-—Fox
Reluctant Debutante—MGM
A Time to Love—(Time to Love and a
Time to Die—U-I)
Astounding She Monster—Am. Inti.
Attila—Attila Assoc
Awakening (Ital.)—Kingsley
Bitter Victory—Col.
Blob—Para.
Blonde Blackmailer—AA
Blood Arrow—Fox
Bravados—Fox
Bullwhip—AA
Camp on Blood Island—Col.
Case Against Brooklyn—Col.
Cattle Empire—Fox
Colossus of New York—Para.
Count Five and Die—Fox
Cross-Up—UA
Cry Baby Killer—AA
Dangerous Youth—War.
Dateline Tokyo—AA
Day of the Bad Man—U-I
Demoniaque (Fr.)—UMPO
Flame Barrier—UA
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Kill Her Gently—Coi.
Fly, The—Fox
f orty Guns—Fox
Fort Dodos—War.
Guniire at Indian Gap—Rep.
Fieri squad—Am. Inti.
How to Make a Monster—Am. Inti.
1 Married a Woman—U-I
Illegal—War.
imitation General—MGM
in tne Money—AA
Kings Go north—UA
Last Bridge (Ger.)—Union Films
Law and Jake wade—MGM
Line Up, The—Coi.
Disa (Ger.)—DCA
Macabre—A A
Man or Gun—Rep.
Man Who Died Twice—Rep.
Naked and the Dead—War.
New Orleans After Dark—AA
Once Upon a Horse—U-I
Oregon Passage—AA
Party Crashers—Para.
Teenage Caveman—Ain. inti.
Return of Dracula—UA
Revenge of r rankenstein—Col.
KoDbery Under Arms (.Br.)—Rank
.houan—DcA
Saddle tne Wind—MGM
SatecracKer—MGtVi
Scotland Yard Dragnet (Br.)—Rep.
Showdown At Bootnnt—F ox
Snorkel—Got.
Space Master X-7—Fox.
Suicide Battalion—Am. Inti.
'Tail Stranger—AA
Teenage Bad Girt—DCA
Thing That Couldn’t Die—U-I
Inunder Road—UA
True Story ot Lynn Stuart—Col.
Vertigo—Bara.
Viking Women and the Sea Serpent—A.I.
Voice in the Mirror—U-I
Vvai' ot the Colossal Beast—Am. Inti.
War of the Satellites—AA
Whole Truth—Got.
Your Past Is Showing (Br.)—Rank
CLASS A—Section III—Morally Unobjectionable for Adults
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Me and the Colonel—Col. Twilight for
Adultress (Fr.)—Times
Another Time, Another Place—Para.
Badlanders—MGM
Bonjour Tristesse—Col.
Brothers Karamazov—MGM
Cabiria (Ital.)—Lopert
Cat On a Hot Tin Roof—MGM
Certain Smile, A—Fox
China Doll—UA
Cool and the Crazy—Am. Inti.
Cry Terror—MGM
Darby’s Rangers—War.
Desire Under the Elms—Para.
Fiend Without a Face—MGM
Fighting Wild Cats—Rep.
Frankenstein-1970—AA
Fraulein—Fox
Gates of Paris (Fr.)—Lopert
Gervaise (Fr.)—Continental
Gigi—MGM
Girl in the Woods—Rep.
Goddess—Col.
Going Steady—Col.
Gunman’s Walk—Col.
Haunted Strangler—MGM
Fligh Cost of Loving—MGM
High School Hellcats—Am. Inti.
Horror of Dracula—U-I
Hot Spell—Para.
Indiscreet—War.
Kathy-O—U-I
Key, The—Col.
Lady Takes a Flyer—U-I
Life Begins At 17—Col.
Long, Hot Summer—Fox
Maracaibo—Para.
Marjorie Morningstar—War.
Muggers—UA
Naked Earth—Fox
Never Love a Stranger—AA
Notorious Mr. Monks—feep.
Ordet (Danish)—Kingsley
Outcasts of the City—Rep.
Pagans—AA
Peyton Place—Fox
Raw Wind in Eden—U-I
Rouge Et Noir (Fr.)—DCA
R,X Murder—Fox
Seven Guns to Mesa—A A
South Pacific—Fox
Stage Struck—Buena Vista
Strange Case of Dr. Manning—Rep.
Teacher’s Pet—Para.
Ten North Frederick—Fox
This Happy Feeling—U-I
Time Without Pity (Br.)—Harlequin
Too Much, Too Soon—War.
Touch of Evil—U-I
Undersea Girl—AA
Unwed Mother—AA
Vikings—UA
Violent Road (Hell’s Highway)—War.
Wild Is the Wind—Para.
Young Lions—Fox
CLASS ET-Morally Objectionable in Part for All
Fiend. Who Walked the We
Affair in Havana—AA
As Long As They’re Happy (Br.)—Rank
Attack of the 50 Foot Woman—AA
Baby Face Nelson—UA
Back from the Dead—Fox
Black Patch—War.
Blonde in Bondage (Swedish)—DCA
Blood of Dracula—Am. Inti.
Bonnie Parker Story—Am. Inti.
Bride and the Beast—AA
Bride Is Much Too eBautiful (Fr.)—Ellis
Cat Girl—Am. Inti.
Confessions of Felix Krull (Ger.)—DCA
Cop Hater—UA
Decision At Sundown—Col.
Devil’s General—DCA
Devil’s Hairpin—Para.
Domino Kid—Col.
Dragstrip Girl—Am. Inti.
Dragstrip Riot—Am. Inti.
18 and Anxious—Rep.
Every Second Counts—DCA
Escape from San Quentin—.Col.
Farewell to Arms—Fox
Female Animal—U-I
Flesh and the Spur—Am. Inti.
Forbidden Desire (Lovers’ Net)—Times
Forbidden Island—Col.
Gang War—Fox
Girl in Black Stockings—UA
Girl ni the Bikini (Fr.)—Atlantis
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
3t—Fox
Girls on the Loose—U-I
God’s Little Acre—UA
Gun Battle At Monterey—AA
Hell Drivers (Br.)—Rank
Hell Bound—UA
High Hell—Para.
High School Confidential—MGM
Hot Car Girl—AA
Hot Rod Gang—Am, Inti.
Invasion of the Saucer Men—Am. Inti.
Island Women—UA
I Was a Teenage Frankenstein—Am. Inti.
I Was a Teenage Werewolf—Am. Inti.
Jailhouse Rock—MGM
Jet Attack—Am. Inti.
Joker Is Wild-—Para.
Juvenile Jungle—Rep.
King Creole—Para.
Kiss Them for Me—Fox
Lafayette Escadrille—War.
Last Paradise—Aidart Films—UA
Left Handed Gun—War.
Les Girls—MGM
Live Fast, Die Young—U-I
Long Haul—Col.
Lost Lagoon—UA
Love in the Afternoon—AA
Love Slaves of the Amazon—U-I
Machine Gun Kelly—Am. Inti.
Mam’zelle Pigalle (Fr.)—Films Around
World
Onionhead—War.
Man in the Shadow—U-I
Man of a Thousand Faces—U-I
Man on the Prowl—U-I
Mister Rock and Roll—Para.
Naked Africa—Am. Inti.
Naked Paradise—Am. Inti.
No Sun in Venice (Fr.)—Kingsley
Pal Joey—Col.
Panama Sal—Rep.
Panic in the Parlor (Br.)—DCA
Parisienne, La (Fr.)—UA
Poor But Beautiful (Ital.)—Trans-Lux
Portland Expose—AA
Portrait of an Unknown Woman—U-I
Pride and the Passion—UA
Razzia (Fr.)—Kassler
Reform School Girl—Am. Inti.
Screaming Mimi—.Col.
Sorority Girl—Am. Inti.
Story of Esther Costello was (Golden
Virgin)—Col.
Tank Battalion—Am. Inti.
Tarnished Angels—U-I
Teenage Wolf Pack (Ger.)—DCA
This Angry Age—Col.
Three Faces of Eve—Fox
Until They Sail—MGM
Valerie—UA
Wayward Girl—Rep.
Young and Wild—Rep.
CLASS C—-Condemned
Adorable Creatures (French)—C.ontinentalMademoiselle
And God Created Woman .(Fr.)—Kingsley Mademoiselle
Baby Doll—War.
Bed of Grass (Greek)—Trans-Lux
Bed, The (Fr.)—Kingsley International
Desperate Women, The—Majestic Films,
Inc.
Elysia—Jos. Brenner
Flesh Is Weak (Br.)—DCA
French Line, The—RICO
Fruits of Summer (Fr.)—Ellis Films
Game of Love (Fr.)—Times Film Corp.
Garden of Eden—Excelsior Pictures
Gobette (Fr.)—IFE
Striptease (Fr.)—DCA
Maid in Paris (Fr.)—Continental
Marie du Port (Fr.)—Beilon-Foulke
Miller’s Beautiful Wife (Ital.)—DCA
Miss Julie (Swedish)—Trans-Global
Mitsou (Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
Pic.
Seven Deadly Sins, The (Fr. and Ital.)
Scarred (Italian)—Casolaro
Sensualita (Barefoot Savage, The)—IFE
She Shoulda Said No (Wild Weed)—Hall
mark Prod.
Sins of the Borgias (Fr.)—Aidart
Smiles of a Summer Night (Swed.)—Rank
Husband for Anna. A (Italian)—IFE Alliance Films
I Am a Camera—DCA One Summer of Happiness (Swedish)—
Illicit Interlude (Swedish)—Gaston Hakim Times
Karamoja—Hallmark Productions, Inc. Paris Nights (Fr.)—Discing-International
La Ronde (Fr.)—Commercial Pictures Passionate Summer (Fr.-Ital.)—Kingsley
Le Plaisir (Fr.)—Mayer-Kingsley Please! Mr. Balzac (Fr.)—DCA
Pictures 0 ™ My Wlndmi11 (Fr - } Tohan Raven, The (Fr.)-Lopert
Light Across the Street (Fr.)-—UMPO Rosanna—Jacon Film
Lover’s Return (Fr.)—Lopert Savage Triangle (Fr.)—Joseph Burstyn
Mom and Dad (Sideroad)—Hallmark Prod.Snow Was Black (Fr.)—Continental
Moon Is Blue, The—UA Son of Sinbad—Howard Hughes-RKO
Naked Night, The (Swedish)—Times FilmStella (Greek)—Burstyn
Nana (Fr.)—Times Strollers, The (Fr.)—Uiseina-Intern’l.
Night Heaven Fell (Fr.)—Kingsley Three Forbidden Stories (Italian)—Ellis
No Orchids for Miss Blandish (British)— Films
Thrill That Kills, The (Cocaine)—Distin
guished Films, Inc.
Violated—Palace
Ways of Love (Fr.-Ital.)—Burstyn
We Want a Child (Danish)—Lippert Prod.
Woman of Rome (Ital.)—DCA
Women Without Names (Ital.)—Lopert
Young and the Damned, The (Mexican)—
Mayer-Kingsley.
SEPARATE CLASSIFICATION
(A separate Classification is given to certain films which, while not morally offensive, require some analysis and explanation
as a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclusions.)
Martin Luther—de Rochemont Storm Center—Col. Adam and Eve (Mex.)—Wm. Horne
Case of Dr. Laurent (Fr.)—Trans-Lux