Newspaper Page Text
NATIONAL LEGION OF DECENCY
453 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N. Y.
MAY 24,1962
Vol. XXVII No. 1<
I*Laza 9-1400
RIGHT REV. MSGR. THOMAS F. LITTLE, S.T.L,
Executive Secretary
REV. PATRICK J. SULLIVAN, 8.J., S.T.D.
Assistant Executive Secretary
MRS. JAMES F. LOORAM, L.H.D.
Chairman, Motion Picture Department, I. F. C. A.
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 co-operation of the Motion
Picture Department of the International
tion of Catholic Alumnae.
CLASS A——Section I —Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Bon Voyage—Buena Vista Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation—Fox
Aiakazam, The Great—Arc. Inti.
Babes in Toyland—Buena Vista
Bashful Elephant—AA
Beauty anu the Beast—UA
Best of Enemies—Col.
Big Red—Buena Vista
Big Wave—A A
Bey Who Caught a Crook (Was: Boy Who
Found $ i s,\J,00G;—UA
Capture That Capsule—UA
Cash On Demand—Col.
Cinderella (R uu ) —J anus
Clown and the Kid—UA
.Couutncfcero »— Fox
Dalton Who Cot Away—Dalton
David anl Go hath—A A
Dentist In the Chair, A (Br.)—-Ajay Film Cv
Desert Patrol—U-I
El Cid - AA
Errand Boy—Para.
Might That Disappeared—UA
Follow That Dream—UA
Forever My Love—Para.
Francis of Assisi—Fox
Gambler Wore a Gun—UA
Greyfriar’s Bobby—Buena Vista
Gun Fight—UA
Guns of Navarone—Col.
CLASS A — Section II
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Hatari—Para.
Heroes Island—UA
Hey, Let’s Twist—Para.
Honeymoon Machine—MCM
invasion Quartet—MGM
jack the Giant Killer—UA
La Belle Americaine (Fr.)—Continental
Lad, A Dog—War.
Lames Man—Para.
Land We Love—UA
Life of Maria Goretti (Ital..)—Catholic Filed
Prods.
Majority of One—War.
Mar, W ho Wagged His Tail (Sp.-ltd.)—
Continental
Merrill’s Marauders—War.
MicLummsr Nights Dream—Show Corp.
Modern Times-- United Artists
Moon Pilot—Buena Vista
Mothra—Col.
Murder She Said—MGM
Music Man—War.
Mysterious Island—Col.
Nearly a Nasty Accident—U-I
Nikki, Wild Dog of the North—Buena VLta
Parent Trap, The—Buena Vista
Pied Piper of Hamelin—Prod. Unlimited
Pirates of Tortuga—Fox
Prisoner of the Iron Mask—Aid. Inti
Furple HiiLs—Fox
Queen of the Pirates—CgI.
Road To Hong Kong—UA
Runaway—Arpix
Safe At Home—Col.
Saintly Sinners—UA
Search for Paradise—Stanley Warner
Second Time Around—Fox
Sergeant Was a Lady—U-I
Sergeants 3—UA
Snake Wonsan-- -UA.
Snow White and the Thrt- Stooge*- •
Summer To Remember, A (Rus?.)--e
Swinging Along—Fox
Teenage Millionaire—UA
Thief of Baghdad—MGM
Three Stooges Meet Hercules—Col.
Twvvu Like Alice, A (Bt.) —
Two Little Bears—Fox
Undemater City—Col.
Valley ol the Dragons—Col.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea —
When the Clock Strikes—UA
Whistle Down the Wind (Br.)—Pathe-Aisi.
X-1S—UA
You Have to Run Fast—UA
Zotz—Col.
Fox
iingsk
? cs
Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
r
Atlantis, the Lost Continent—MGM
Battle At Bloody Beach—Fox
Belle Sommers—Col.
Beware of Children—Am. Inti.
Beyond All Limits—Pathe-Am.
Big Money—UA
Birdmen of Alcatraz—UA
Black Tights—Magna Films
Blue Hawaii—Para.
Brainwashed—AA
Bridge, The—AA
Bridge To the Sun—MGM
Broken Land—Fox
Brushfire—Para.
Burn, Witch, Burn—Am. Inti.
Cat Burglar—UA
Colossus of Rhodes—MGM
Cow and I, The (Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
Dead to the World—UA
Deadly Companions—Pathe
Deadly Duo—UA
Devil At 4 O’Clock—Col.
Don’t Knock the Twist—Col.
Dr. Blood’s Coffin—UA
Eleventh Commandment—Prairie
Escape From Zahrain—Para.
Experiment In Terror—Col.
Fanny—War.
Fear No More—Pathe-America
Five Finger Exerci-e—Col.
Flight of the Lost Balloon—Realart
Burning Nights—UA
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Flower Drum Song—U-I
Follow That Man—UA
Frantic (Fr.)—Times Film Corp.
Geronimo—UA
Gidget Goes Hawaiian—Col.
Gun Street—UA
Hand of Death—Fox
Hands of a Stranger—AA
Hell Is For Heroes—Para.
Hellions, The—Col.
Horizontal Lieutenant—MGM
Incident in an Alley—UA
Judgment At Nuremberg—UA
Last Time I Saw Archie—UA
Lisa—Fox
Lonely Are the Brave—U-I
Lost Battalion—Am. Inti.
Madison Avenue—Fox
Magic Sword—UA
Man In the Moon—Trans-Lux
Man Who Died Twice—Rep.
Man Who Shot Liberty Valance—Para.
Manster—UA
Mash, The-War.
Mein kampf—Col.
Mighty Ursus—UA
Miracle Worker—UA
Most Wanted Man—Astor
My Geisha—Para.
Naked Edge—UA
Neapolitan Carousel (Ital.)—Lux
Night Creatures—U-l
Outsider—U-I
Pit and the Pendulum—Am. Inti.
Pleasure of His Company -Para
Premature Burial—Am. Inti.
Pocketful of Miracles—UA
Reprieve—AA
Risk, The—Kingsley-Intl.
Rommd s Treasure—Medallion
Samar—War.
Sardonicus—Col.
Scream of Fear—Col.
Secret of Deep Harbor—U A
Shadow of the Cat—U-l
Six Black Horses—U-I
State Fair—Fox
13 West Street—Col.
Third of a Man—UA
Throne of Blood (Jap.)—Brandon
Time Bomb—AA
Trunk, The—Col.
Twenty Plus Two—AA
Twist All Night—Am. Inti.
Twist Around the Clock—Col.
Two Rode Together—Col,
Valiant—UA
War Hunt—UA
Weekend With Lulu—Co!.
Woman Hunt—Fox
World In My Pocket—MGM
Young Doctors—UA
Young Savages—UA
CLASS A — Section 111—Morally Unobjectionable for Adults
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Counterfeiters of Paris—MGM
Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus
Ada—MGM
All Fall Down—MGM
Anatomy of a Syndicate (Was: Big Operator)
—Cinema Assoc.
Armored Command—AA
Bachelor In Paradise—MGM
Blast ot Silence—U-I
Boys Night Out—MGM
Breakfast At Tiffany’s—Para,
By Love Possessed—UA
Cape Fear—U-I
Claudelle Inglish—War.
Children’s Hour—UA
Come September—U-I
Counterfeit Traitor—Para.
Coucb, The—War.
Double Bunk (Br.)—Show Corp.
Fever in the Blood, A—War.
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse—MGM
George Raft Story—AA
Girl With a Suitcase (Ital.)—Ellis
-UA
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Notorious Landlady—Col.
Taste of Honey—Continental
Great War, The—Lopert
Happy Thieves—UA
Hitler—AA
Hustler, The—Fox
Information Received (Br.)—U-I
Innocents, The—Fox
La Notte Brava (Ital.)—Miller
Last Year At Marienbad (Fr.)—Astor
Light in the Piazza—MGM
Loss of Innocence (Was: Greengage Summer)
—Col.
Murder, Inc.—Fox
Ninth Circle (Yug.)—Jadran Films
Nun and the Sergeant—UA
One Plus One—Selected Pics.
One, Two, Three—UA
Only Two Can Play (Br.)—Col.
Pigeon That Took Rome—Para.
Return to Peyton Place—Fox
Ride the High Country—MGM
Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)—Astor
Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone—War.
CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for All
Rome Adventure—War.
Sail a Crooked Ship—Col.
Satan Never Sleeps—Fox
Season of Passion—UA
Seven Women From Hell—Fox
Singer Not the Song—War.
Something Wild—UA
Stop Me Before I Kill—Col.
Summer and Smoke—Para.
Susan Slade—War.
Sweet Bird of Youth—MGM
Tender Is the Night—Fox
Three On a Spree—UA
Through a Glass Darkly (Swed.)—Janus
Thunder of Drums—MGM
Town Without Pity—UA
Two Women (Ital.)—Embassy
Unfaithfuls, The—UA
View From the Bridge—Continental
West Side Story—UA
Wolf Larsen—AA
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Cabinet of Caligari—Fox
Bachelor Flat—Fox
Biv'-k Street—U-I
Confessions of An Opium Eater—AA
I>ay the Earth Caught Fire—U-I
Devil’s Eye, The (Swed.)—Janus
Explosive Generation—UA
Five Minutes To Live—Pathe-Am.
Force of Impulse—Pathe-America
Goodbye Again—UA
Guns of the Black Witch—Am. Inti.
Head, The—Trans-Lux
House of Fright (was: Two Faces of Dr.
Jekyll)—Amer. Int.
House of Women—War.
Adorable Creatures (French)—Continental
And God Created Woman (Fr.)—Kingsley
Baby Doll—War.
Bed of Grass (Greek)—Trans-Lux
Bed, The (French)—Kingsley International
Bell’Antonio (Ital.)—Embassy Films
Breathless (Fr.)—Films Around World
Cold Wind In August—Aidart
Come Dance With Me (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl
Desperate Women, The—Majestic Films, Ine.
During One Night (Br.)—Astor
Expresso Bongo (Br.)—Continental
Five Day Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl.
Green Carnation (was: Trials of Oscar Wilde)
< Br.)--Warwick Films
Green Mare (Fr.)—Zenith
Heroes and Sinners (Fr.)—Januj
Husband for Anna. A (Italian)—IFE
I Am a Camera—DCA
Till'it Interlude (Swedish)—Gaston Hakim
Jules and Jim (Fr.)—Janus
Karamoja- Hallmark Productions. Inc.
l.’Avventura (Ital.)—Janus
La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert
Lady Cbattarley’s Laver (Fr.)—Kingsley
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Jessica—UA
Joker, The (Fr.)—Lopert
Journey To the Seventh Planet—Am. Inti.
Leda (Fr.)—Times
Lover, Come Back—U-I
Lovers On a Tightrope (Fr.)—Interworld
Man Trap—Para.
Marines Let’s Go—Fox
Mark, The (Irish)—Continental
Mary Had a Little (Br.)—Lopert
Maxime (Fr.)—Interworld
Night of Evil—Pathe-Am.
Night: of Rasputin (Ital.)—Premiere
No Love for Johnny (Br.)—Embassy
Paris Blues—UA
CLASS C — Condemned
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Joan of the Angels?—Polish-Telepix
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Fr.)-Astor Pic- Passionate Summer (Fr.-Ital.)-Kingsley
tures Inc PleaseI Mr Balzac (Fr.)-DCA
Liane, J ungle Goddess—DCA
Love Game (Fr.)—Films Around World
Love Is My Profession (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl.
Lover’s Return (French)—Lopert
Doctor In Love—Rank
Peeping Tom—Astor
Private Lives of Adam and Eve—U-I
Purple Noon (Fr.)—Times
Siege of Syracuse—Para.
Splendor in the Grass—War.
Telltale Heart—Brigadier
That Touch of Mink—U-I
Tomorrow Is My Turn (Fr.)—Showcorp
Too Late Blues—Para.
Wild Harvest—Pathe-Am.
Wonders of Aladdin—MGM
World by Night—War.
Young Helions (Was; High School Confides*
rial)—Cinema Assoc.
of Parij) (Ft,)—*
Lovers, The (Fr.)—Zenith
Mademoiselle Gobette (French)—IFE
Mademoiselle Striptease (Fr.)—DCA
Magdalena (Ger.)—Buhawk
Maid in Paris (Fr.)—Continental
Marie du Port (French)—Bellon-Foulke
Mating Uree—Citation
Miller’s Beautiful Wife (Ital.)—DCA
Port of Desire—Union
Pot Boullle (Lovers
Continental
Prime Time—Essanjay Films, Inc.
Private Property—Citation
Question of Adultery—NTA
Rosanna—Jacon Film
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (Br.)~
Continental
Savage Eye—Trans-Lux-Kingsley Inti
Sins of the Borgias (French)—Aidart
Sins of Mona Kent—Astor
Miss Julia (Swedish)-Trans-Global Pictures Smiles of a Summer Night (Swedish)
Mttsou (rr )-Zemth Inti Snow Was Black (Fr .).-Continental
Mom and Dad (Sidercad)— Hahmark Prod. Stella (Greek)—Burstya
Temptation (Fr.-Ital.)—Shelton
Third Sex (Ger.)—D. & F. Dist.
-Rank
Moon Is Blue, The—UA
Naked Night, The (Swedish)—Times Film
Nana (Fr.)—Times
Never On Sunday (Greek)—Lopert
Night Heaven Fell (Fr.)—Kingsley
Night, The (La Notte) (Ital.)—Lopert
Odd Obsession (Jap.)—Harrison
O-car Wilde (Br.)—Four City Enterprises
SEPARATE
Trials of Oscar Wilde (Br.) -Warwick Flhr«s
Truth, The (La Verity) (Fr.i—Kingsley Inti,
Viridiana (Sp.)—Kingsley-Intl.
Wasted Lives and The Birth of Twin*--
K. Gordon Murray Production
Woman of Rome fJtal.)—DCA
CLASSIFICATION
! A Separate Classification is given to certain films which, while not morally offensive in themselves, require caution and some analysis
ss a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclusions.)
Adam and F a: (Mex.)—Wm. Horne
Anatomy of a Murder—Col.
Case of Dr. I an rent (Fr.)--Trans-Lux
Circle of D» epFon —Fox
Crowning Experience—MRA
Girl of the Night—War,
Intruder—Pathe-Am.
King of Kings—MGM
T.ft Dolce Vita (Ital,)—Astor Pictures, Inc.
Lolita—Seven Arts
Martin Luther—cle Rodiemout
Never Take Candy From u Stranger- -Gmaft
Corp.
Storm Center Coi.
Suddenly, Last Summer -Col.
Victim (Br.)—Pathe-America
Walk On the Wild Side—Col.
(BOOKS
lAJriterd
and
ik.ea.di
THE BULLETIN, June 9, 1962—PAGE 7
ers
EDITED BY LEO J. ZUBER
2332 North Decatur Rd. Decatur. Georgia
A. M. D. G.
For the greater glory of
God and for the spiritual
benefit of authors, publishers,
reviewers and readers.
THE SINGLE WOMEN, by
Phyllis I. Rosenteur, Bobbs-
Merrill, 1961, 288 pp., $4.50.
Reviewed by E. Matthews.
At some time in her life,
every woman is “single" -
not married, or widowed -
and with statistics being
what they are, "single"
is the status of a great many
women for most of their lives.
Phyllis Rosenteur writes with
good humor and good sense and
with real empathy. Life is to
be lived, and the single woman
who lives instead of "just
waiting" becomes a whole per
son and more prepared for
whatever life has to offer
(maybe even a husband!) Every
one is full of advice for the
"single woman", and most of
it is directed toward eliminating
the "single," and most of it
is unwanted and ill advised. Miss
Rosenteur is quite knowledge
able of the good and bad side
in being single and is just as
much aware of the good and
bad side of being married. To
seek marriage as a status sym
bol or because "everyone does"
is to lose the richness both
ways of life have to offer. The
emotional upheaval caused by
divorce leaves a woman very
much the prey of conflicting
advisors. For this reason, lyliss
Rosenteur’s book is good read
ing for married women.
This review is not intended
to give an "imprimatur." Miss
Rosenteur has written a book
of general guidance for women
in general. And, as with all
generalities, to be used by the
individual, it must be in
dividually interpreted. That is,
a Catholic woman will need to
interpret this book in the light
of Catholic teaching. The author
does not presume to treat of
the reasons for staying single
in the manner that St. Paul
does nor is she writing a moral
treatise .designed . to develop
Christian virture as such. She
is devoted to her own nieces
and God-children and her own
creative way of life, and there
fore perhaps did not feel the
necessity of cautioning against
becoming hardened in selfish
ness in the single life.
The Single Women is for
singLe women, not for ado
lescents, though college girls
could perhaps benefit from this
banishment of bogeymen and
unmasking of men.
All in all, Miss Rosenteur
presents reasonable guidance
and advice, and, because it is
reasonable, it is for the most
part in conformity with Catholic
teaching.
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: A
HANDBOOK, by Thomas Marc
Parrott, Scribner’s, 1961, 266
pp., $1.45.
Reviewed by Theodora Koob.
This is an addition to the
Scribner Library of paper bound
books. For literature students it
should be a very welcome addU
tion, done by the able Thomas
Parrott of Princeton Uni
versity. Anyone familiar with
the Parrott edition of the com
plete plays of Shakespeare will
expect and then be gratified to
find in the Handbook the same
terse but vivid style and
dynamic pointedness which
seems to penetrate into the
spirit of the Elizabethan age.
Despite its convenient small
size this little book manages to
convey considerable infor
mation ranging from the an
cestry through the known facts
of Shakespeare’s life and in
cluding much interesting ma
terial about the kind of world
and theatre for which he wrote.
Chapter X on Shakespeare’s
Development is especially in
teresting and also Chapter XII
which deals with the text of the
plays and brings out particu
larly the reasons for and the
history of the changes in the
great Bard’s lines.
Last but not least are some
very enlightening appendices
and tables and a good index. This
inexpensive book can be highly
recommended to any student of
Shakespeare from high school
on. Illustrative material ap
pears throughout adding to the
value to the Shakespeare lover.
WOMEN, WORDS AND WIS
DOM, by Solange Hertz, New
man, 1959, 184 pp., $3.00.
Reviewed by Jane Woodham.
Women, Words and Wisdom
is liberally witty, realistic as
this morning’s bacon and very
much fun to read. It also, and
not incidentally, is one of the
very best of the species of
handbooks for housewives ever
published. Only samples can
really tell you. "Mental idle
ness ... is worse, because
like ragged underwear, it
doesn’t show until something
vital snaps." And, "It’s the
housewife’s special little share
in the Redemption to be able to
atone for others’ sins by
washing others’ clothes." And,
’ Unfortunately a lot of good
reading, like virtue, gets a
bad name because for some
unaccountable reason it at
tracts the worst squares."
Mrs. Hertz is very much in
earnest about her vocation, and
is therefore sufficiently relax
ed in it to share an uncommon
insight and sympathy. Es
pecially good are her chapters
on children. ’The only thing He
made more of than housewives
is little children." A gem of a
book to inspire ^nd entertain.
Good gift idea.
p'Ancis MacA/Vaiuis
XSIHI
commbsH
ST. COLUMBAN, by Francis
MacManus, Sheed & Ward, 1962,
240 pp., $3.95.
Reviewed by E. Matthews.
The fantastic and the mira
culous were much a part of
the life of St. Columban who
left his Irish monastery with
a few monks to hew out mon
asteries in Gaul and Italy. With
a faith sufficient to move
mountains, he did not hesitate
to become involved with royal
intrigues and churcH politics,
and with a true spirit of pro
phesy, he announced the Fate
of certain powerful personages.
He ruled his communites with
a strictness bordering on
harshness and yet imparted to
his monks the same strong love
of God that burned in his own
heart.
In this noble attempt to bring
to life again from the obscure
sixth century the vivid
personality of St. Columban,
Francis MacManus has used
well the available material. For
V/.
Ml,' 1 " '
V I' 1 \»/ X
“Not NOW! I’ll tell you when."
FROM INSIDE BROTHER JUNIPER, by Father Justin
Mc-Carthy, Hanover House, 1961, $1.00.
Miss Flannery O’Connor
Receives Honorary Degree
NOTRE DAME, Ind., - Three
American women, outstanding
in the fields of literature, ci
vic leadership and education re
ceived honorary degrees at
Saint Mary’s College, Notre
Dame, Indiana, on June 2. They
were Miss Flannery O'Connor,
short story writer and novelist;
Mrs. Robert E. Wittman, Ca
tholic lay leader of El Paso,
Texas and Sister Mary
Emmanuel Collins,O.S.F., Vice
President and Dean of the Col
lege of Saint Teresa, Winona,
Minnesota.
The first published work of
Flannery O’Connor appeared in
Accent, to be followed by other
short stories in Partisan Re
view, Kenyon Review, Sewanee
Review, Harper’s Bazaar and
Mademoiselle. Her two novels
include Wise Blood (1952) and
The Violent Bear It Away (1960).
A Good Man is Hard to Find
and Other Stories was published
in 1955, and from this volume
"A Circle in the Fire" won an
O. Henry Award.
Although she was born in Sa
vannah, Georgia, Miss O’Con
nor has spent the greater part
of her life in Milledgeville,
Georgia, where she completed
high school, and was graduated
from Georgia State College for
Women in 1945 with a B.A. in
social sciences. In 1-947*, she
received an M.F.A. from State
the most part, his source is
Jonas, the mond of Bobbio, who
probably wrote as much fantasy
as fact in the first biography,
and certainly he wrote only of
the "good" things of his holy
founder. To situate his charac
ter more realistically in his
time, MacManus has tried to
give his readers a background
in the history which can become
dry with unfamiliar sounding
names of people and places.
MISS FLANNERY O’CONNOR
University of Iowa where she
studied creative writing under
Paul Engle. In 1957, she was
awarded a grant from the Na
tional Academy of Arts and Let
ters, and was a Kenyon Review
Fellow, 1954-55.
LATEST
LEGION
LISTINGS
CLASS A
SECTION I
Invasion of the Star Creatures
CLASS A
SECTION II
Spiral Road
The Young Ones
CLASS A - SECTION III
And The Wild, Wild Women
I Like Money
It Happened in Athens
CLASS B
Concrete Jungle
The Brain That Wouldn’t Die
The Payroll
SEPARATE
CLASSIFICATION
Advice and Consent
RETREAT SCHEDULE
IGNATIUS HOUSE
SUNDAY, JUNE 10-FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1962 -- SPECIAL
THURSDAY, JUNE 21 - SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 1962 -- (M)
Captain - Mr. Ferdinand Buckley, 639 Carriage Dr., N. E., BL. 5-3437.
THURSDAY, JUNE 28 - SUNDAY, JULY 1, 1962 — SPECIAL
SUNDAY, JULY 8, 196? - OPEN HOUSE - All are invited.
THURSDAY, JULY 12 - SUNDAY, JULY 15, 1962 — (W)
Captain - Mrs. Rosemary Menk, 2711 Hillcrest Ave., Augusta, RE 313879.
Co-Captain - Miss Louise Mulherin, 1521 Monte Sano Ave., Augusta, RE 3-4106.
THURSDAY, JULY 19-SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1962 — (M)
Captain - Mr. Hugh Grady, 505 E. 40th St., Savannah, AD 3-3336
Co-Captain - Mr. Flem Cliett, 410 E. 39th St., Savannah, AD 2-3133
Co-Worker - Mr. Daniel Keane, 210 E. Liberty St., Savannah
Co-Worker - Mr. Tom Buttimer, 220 Forrest Ave., Savannah
Co-Worker - Mr. Eugene Powers, 120 E. Bay St., Savannah
Co-Worker - Mr. Joseph Hutton, Savannah Beach
THURSDAY, JULY 26-SUNDAY, JULY 29, 1962 — (W)
Captain - Mrs. Rober. Conner, Columbus, FA 3-9866
Co-Captain - Mrs. Polk Land, Columbus, FA 2-8061
Captain - Mrs. P. G. Kelly, 2003 LaVista Rd., N. E., Atlanta, ME 4-0058
Co-Worker - Mrs. Lee Besnon, 3173 Woodrow Way, N. E., Atlanta, CE 7-8747
Co-Worker - Mrs. Harry Gernazian, 1796 Mt. Royal Dr., N. E., Atlanta, ME 4-4621
Co-Worker - Mrs. Tom McCarty, 516 Drexel Ave., Decatur, DR 8-3288
Co-Worker - Mrs. Jos. L. Neiner, 1538 Windsor Parkway, N. E. , Atlanta, CE 3-8473
Mrs. Armour Sherrer, 601 Howard St., Marietta, 428-4554