Southern cross. (Savannah, Ga.) 1963-2021, February 16, 1963, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PAGE 2—The Southern Cross, February 16, 1963 LAND REFORM IN CHILE—Implementing an ambitious land reform program in Chile, the Archdiocese of Santiago and Diocese of Talca, have distributed some 8,700 acres of prime land between 150 farm families. In top photo, Father Gonsalo Arroyo, S. H., (standing) goes over plans for the Church land reform with Father M. Zanartu, S.J., at the Bellarmine Center in Santiago. The Center has con ducted exhaustive studies before making recommendations to the Bishops. In lower photo, the leaders of a pilot, 17- family cooperative farm at Los Silos discuss the use of the land given them by the Talca diocese. -(NC Photos) Jewish Board Urges Broader Principles On Religious Rights City Opposes School HACKENSACK, N. J., (NC) --Superior Court Judge Char les W. Broadhurst has taken under study here a suit brought by the Newark archdiocese to upset a zoning ordinance in nearby Hohokus. The case concerns a 20- acre plot of ground purchased in 1960 by the archdiocese in Hohokus, a residential Bergen County community. When the archdiocese announced plans to build a school on the site, the borough council amended its zoning ordinance to bar all but Sunday schools from the area involved. Frederick J. Gassert of New ark, attorney for the archdio cese, argued during a three- day hearing that this con stituted illegal selective and spot zoning. In his brief, he also charged that is was an improper use of police power, was not in accord ance with New Jersey statutes and constituted discrimination against parochial schools be cause land could be made available to the public school district despite the existence of the amended zoning law. The archdiocese was joined in the suit by Grace D. Brown, seller of the land which was formerly the site of a riding club. Seven Hohokus residents joined the borough in opposing the suit. Judge Broadhurst is not expected to announce his decision before at least a two- week study of the case. Greenlanders Never Forget COPENHAGEN, Denmark, (NC)- “Where is the boat and where are my Greenlanders?’’ wondered an American priest standing at the edge of the ice on a Greenland fjord last year. He was about as alone as a man can be on this earth. The boat had taken Father Thomas Killeen, O.M.I., most of the way from mission post to the U. S. radar station Dyne. .1,, where he had offered Mass for the Catholic person nel. It had been an 11-hour walk along the fjord ice and then up a mountainside after the priest left the boat. The re turn walk to the promised ren dezvous point had taken 13 hours. As Father Killeen scanned the sea for signs of the boat he realized he was in danger of drifting away on the ice. He turned back to land, and bed ded down for the night in his sleeping bag. Next day he came back to the water’s edge. Still no boat. Fingering the few remaining pieces of bread he had left, Father Killeen mulled the claim that Greenlanders never forget what they have promised. He was sure that his friends had met with some delay, but he could not help feeling some an xiety as the hours wore on. Finally, after seven hours had passed, the Greenlanders ar- arived. They told him they had been unable to maneuver their boat through drifting ice. “I had not been in danger,” said Father Killeen to an inter viewer here, “but a storm might have arisen and then I wouldi have been in a risky situation.” 1 “Eternal Light” To Honor “Women Of Valor” NEW YORK--A cycle of six plays about “Women of Valor” will be presented by “Eternal Light” on NBC Radio this month and next (Sundays 12:30 p.m. EST). In observance of Brotherhood Week the first play, Sunday, Feb. 17, will be a tribute to the late Eleanor Roosevelt, The script, “Eleanor Roosevelt: A Recollection,” is by Virginia Mazer. The subsequent dramas will deal with women of the Bible: Miriam, Feb. 24; Queen Esther, March 10; Deborah, March 17; Naomi, March 24; and Abigail, March 31. The cycle will be interrupted March 3 for “Never Ask What County,” a play by Morton Wis- hengrad about the late William Green, for 28 years president of the American Federation of Labor. It will mark the 90th anniversary of Green’s birth. “Eternal Light,” an NBC Public Affairs presentation, is produced in cooperation with the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., (NC)- An international Jewish organization has called for a broad set of principles on elim inating religious intolerance. The Coordinating Board of Jewish Organizations said that a set of draft principles drawn up by a United Nations sub commission “deals only with a small--yet naturally impor tant—sector” of the problems of religious intolerance. The Jewish board made its comments in a statement sub mitted (Jan. 28) to the UN Sub commission on the Prevention of Discrimination and Protec tion of Minorities. The board said that “as a body repre senting Jewish organizations in 41 countries we feel particu larly competent to address our selves to the problems connec ted with religious intolerance.” The board is a nongovern mental organization which has consultative status with the UN. A General Assembly reso lution (Dec. 7, 1962) request ed the Economic and Social Council to ask the Commis sion on Human Rights to pre pare a declaration on relig ious liberties for consideration at the assembly’s 18th session next fall. The assembly resolution ask ed the subcommission, whose 1963 session ran from January 14 to February 1, to express its views before the Human CHICAGO, (NC)—A Metho dist minister said here that one aspect of the birth control infor mation program approved by the Illinois Public Aid Com mission would tend to promote immoral behavior in women. Rev. Robert Bruce Pierce, pastor of the Chicago Temple (First Methodist Church of Chi cago), said in a sermon (Feb. 3) that he “would entirely ap prove of granting contracep tive services on request to any client living with a legal hus band or wife.” “But where I will not agree,” he asserted, “is in that portion of the action of the Illinois Public Aid Commission that will make these contraceptive serv ices available to unmarried wo men, and/or women living with other than the legal husband.” j The commission voted this past December to use tax funds to supply birth control informa tion and devices to any public; Rights commission starts its work. The commission’s 1963 session starts March 11 in Geneva. The subcommission on the Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities passed a resolution (Jan. 28) which stated that a set of draft principles it had submitted to the Human Rights commission in 1960 contains the “basic elements which should be in cluded in a draft declaration on the elimination of all forms of religious intolerance.” In its statement, the Co ordinating Board of Jewish Or ganizations observed that the principles being studied by the Human Rights Commission “deal only with a small—yet naturally important—sector of the whole problems of religious intolerance, namely, intol erance which affects freedom of religion and its (religion’s) practice itself.” The organizations said that the General Assembly resolu tion calls for a declaration not only on attitudes, but on “those forms of intolerance that lead to or result in acts.” The statement maintains that implied in the resolution’s pre amble is the assumption that “an objective situation of in equality created by artificial distinctions based upon race, color or religion, does create attitudes of religious intol erance.” reliefer with a spouse or child who makes a request. Spokes men for Catholic groups have objected strongly to the pro gram. Latest Legion Listings CLASS A SECTION 1 Reptilicus Seven Seas To Calais Son of Flubber The Titans * * * CLASS A SECTION 2 The Huns CLASS A Section 3 Fatal Desire Winter Light Monkey in The Winter Minister Raises Objection To Birth Control Program Church Reform In Chile Points Way To Land Distribution Of Own Lands By Latin America is a vast area of tremendous potential growth, but also a region of great tension and revolutionary unrest. Will it fall prey to communism or advance along the road to Christian democracy? The editor of Noticias Catholics, Spanish-language edition of the N. C. W. C. News Service, who recently finished a tour of Latin America, reports in the following article on the strenuous efforts being made by the growing Catholic social forces to guide one of the area's coun tries towards Christian democracy. By Jaime Fonseca (N. C. W. C. News Service) The Catholic Church in Chile has its hand on the plow of a precedent-making pilot project of land reform. Back in the fall of 1961, the Bishops of Chile announced after their annual meeting that farms and estates belonging to all dioceses in the country would be divided and sold to rural families. Their goal, they said, is “effective land reform—bet ter use of the land for the common good and a greater par ticipation by the rural working families in the ownership of and income from the land.” The Bishops did not mean “manana.” They engaged agri cultural experts to study the soils of Church-owned lands, and they put lawyers to work studying legal questions per taining to land. Then last June the Church opened the first furrow from which it hopes a new landholding system will spring out for the rest of the country. “Today we go a step further in applying the teachings of Christ and the social doctrine of the Church,” said Bishop Manuel Larrain of Talca, ad dressing a group of farm fami lies at Los Silos de Pirque. The 450 acres of prime farm land they had been working as “inquilinos” or tenant laborers were to be theirs after a short trial period. A few weeks later, Raul Car dinal Silva Henriquez of Santia go was delivering a similar promise to another group of “huaso” families at another Church-owned property, the 3,500-acre estate of Las Pataguas. “We have started to fulfill a resolution of the Church in Chile to give its lands to those who till them,” he said. In the past 10 months, the Diocese of Talca and the Santi ago archdiocese have relinqui shed some 8,700 acres in favor of 150 farm families. The lands, valued at $415,000 will be theirs at a price far below their worth. The prospective landholders have 20 years to pay, at six per cent interest, and with the first payment deferred for two years. Conditions such as these are unheard of in Chile, where mortgages and commercial loans when available -bear normal interest rates of 20 to 25 per cent annually. This land distribution on the part of the Church does not mean that the Bishops have been rich land owners. Most lands granted by the Spanish Crown in colonial times were confiscated in 1824, along with the suppression of the tithe, in a series of laws which impoverished the Church. The few properties it has today come from bequests for the support of its educational and charitable work. But the Bishops, however, are determined to set the ex ample to pave the way for so cial justice in their country. Chile has over 300 large farms with over 12,250 acres apiece, while 500,000 peasants live on less then four acres per family. Chilean agriculture is con centrated in the fertile Central Valley—a 600-mile strip in the heart of the country which has an average width of only 110 miles. Ninety per cent of the cultivated area consists of large estates, a landholding system which remains quasifeudal. ‘ ‘The primary mission of the Church is to teach,” stated Bishop Larrain in his historic speech at Los Silos. “It is the duty of Christians convinced of the Church’s teaching to effect such reforms as needed. . . But when the Church can add her deeds to her words, she does so gladly, even if it means sacrifice, and opposition on the part of some.” Bishop Larrain made only a passing reference to sacrifice. Yet there is real sacrifice on the part of the Church in this program. However meager the income from the estates has been, the Church did use it for its many needs. Santiago, the richest archdio cese in the country, has an aver age yearly income of $160,000 to administer to 2,377,000 Ca tholics, run a multitude of soc ial institutions, and teach some 83,000 children in 228 Catholic schools. Talca, with 34 rural parishes and very ittle industry, has 352,000 souls and an annual income of $14,000. In its 75 schools it educates 15,000 children. It cares for another thousand people in its charitable institutions. The Bishops’ program has also aroused the wrath of vested' interests who see in it a leftist plot. But a Christian Family Movement group in Santiago came to the defense of Bishop Larrain. It published a letter stating: “If the Church land reform is bringing an uneasy conscience to many landed families, that’s fine. It might well be that they soon will open their eyes to this acute problem.” As with Los Silos, the Santia go land reform program is preceded by careful studies of soils, irrigation, access to markets and above all, the hu man factor. The Cardinal and his advisers are following a two-stage plan: first, to change the passive, uninterested ten ant farmer or “peon” of the past into a small * ‘ entrepeneur’ ’ seeking to improve his lot; second, to give him the land as his own. Father Gonzalo, S. J., of the Bellarmine Social Studies Cen ter in Santiago, has stated: “From the very beginning we want the co-op members to achieve self-government. Our help is limited to lending a hand in technical know-how, ac quiring a farm tractor and other implements, in securing better seeds, in arranging credit and money while waiting for the harvest. . .” “We are educating the tenant farmer in a new sense of re sponsibility and efficiency as the best incentive for producing better and more. The day we can launch land reform on a nationwide basis in Chile, such farmers will make the differ ence between success or ruin.” But there are already these signs of success: 1. Production per acre is already up. At Las Pataguas it reached 50 per cent above the previous crops. At Los Silos, farmers live better, can invest more capital in farm im provements. 2. Intensive farming makes it possible to support more peo ple. Las Pataguas had 60 fami lies before reform; now it has 106. Seasonal help was used before for 70 days, now it runs for 120 days. Against the for mer 65 extra hands it used to bring in, it how hires 80. 3. Farm families take to pro ven cooperative techniques quickly. 4. Both farmers and leaders constantly discover “new hori zons”—their unknown abilities, a latent moral integrity, in creased charity, better family life, a “national” conscience of the land problem. By giving up a few material lands, the Church is planting a rich har vest of spiritual and human divi dends. Diocesan Council Board Meeting MACON--The spring lunch eon meeting of the Executive Board of the Savannah Diocesan Council of Catholic Women was held here, February 6th. Right Reverend Monsignor Thomas I. Sheehan, pastor of St. Joseph’s Church, Macon was a guest at the meeting and asked the bless ing. After the luncheon, reports were given by the Deanery Presidents and Committee Chairmen. Following each chairman's report, a discus sion was held. The Board voted to send the Diocesan president, Mrs. JosephDembowski and onr National Director, Mrs. Nor man I. Boatwright to the NCCW Institute which will be held in Miami, April 4th through the 7th. Plans for the Diocesan con vention to be held May 11th and 12th in Columbus, Georgia were discussed. After the re ports and discussions were con cluded, Mrs. Norman I. Boat wright, National Director of the Atlanta Archdiocese, gave an interesting talk on her first Schedules New Duties For Deacons ATLANTA, Ga.,(NC) -Semi narians who are ordained dea cons in the Atlanta archdiocese this summer will emulate the first deacons of the Church by serving the poor, and sharing in the preaching and baptizing duties of the parishes to which they will be assigned. Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta said the deacon pro gram will be on an experimen tal basis. They will work under the direction of pastors and will be able to distribute Holy Com munion, both in the Church and on visits to the sick, he said. “An ‘active diaconate’, be sides being of real help to the parish, will also provide a good 'apprenticeship ’ to our dea cons as they begin their final year of preparation for our diocesan priesthood,” the Archbishop said. The Archbishop stated “In the early centuries of Chris tianity, the deacons had signifi cant duties in the Church. Today the order of the diaconate is only a stepping stone on the way to the priesthood. To em phasize its importance, and to give our people a better view of the varied sacred tasks, the Archdiocese of Atlanta this summer will inaugurate, on an experimental basis, a program for the three young men who are about to enter their ‘dea con year’ in their student pre paration for the diocesan priesthood. The Archbishop said on June 1, 1963, at Christ the King Ca thedral here Michael A. Morris, Edward A. Danneker, and James F. Sharer will be ordained dea cons, and will be assigned for seven weeks to three city par ishes. Educational Groups Meet WASHINGTON, (NC)-Re presentatives of 21 national ed- ucatiori groups met in a closed, three-hour session here to dis cuss proposed Federal aid to education. A two-sentence statement is sued to reporters after the meeting (Feb. 8) merely ac knowledged that the session had been held and said that discus sion centered principally on President Kennedy’s omnibus- aid bill. Newsmen were told by one source that no agreements were made and that the meeting amounted chiefly to a restate ment of views by the various associations, with no apparent change in views. The gathering was convened by the National Educational As sociation and by the American Council on Education. The Na tional Catholic Association was among those groups represent ed. NCCW Board meeting in Wash ington, D. C. She and the other board mem bers were conduced on a private tour of the White House and a personal meeting with President Kennedy. They also had a private visit with the Apostolic Delegate, His Excel lency Most Reverend Egidio Vagnozzi, D. D., at his official residence in Washington. Are )6v Enjoying HEAERESM SeaM ? Serve pRESH’Ixxi FISH STICKS * Fresh-Lock Seafoods, produced by a new process exclusive with Gorton's, retain natural juices and nutritive elements of fresh caught fish to bring you truly fresh flavor and goodness. LEGION OF DECENCY CLASS A —Section I — Morally Unobjectionable (or General Patronage Air Patrol—Fox Alakczam, The Great—Am. Inti. Almost Angels—Buena Vista Best of Enemies—Col. Big Red—Buena Vista Big Wave—AA Bon Voyage—Buena Vista Boy Who Caught a Crook (Was: Boy Who Found $100,000)—UA Capture That Capsule—UA Coming Out Party (Br.)—Union Constantine and the Cross—Embassy Dalton Who Got Away—Dalton Damon and Pythias—MGM Damn the Defiant (Br.)—Col. Day Mars Invaded the Earth—Fox Dentist in the Chair, A (Br.)—Ajay Film Co. Escape from East Berlin—MGM Five Weeks in a Balloon—Fox Flight That Disappeared—UA Francis of Assisi—Fox Gay Purree—War. Gigot—Fox Great Van Robbery—UA Harold Lloyd’s World of Comedy—Continental Hatari—Para. Heroes Island—UA Honeymoon Machine—MGM In Search of the Castaways—Buena Vista Invasion of the Star Creatures—Am. Inti. Invasion Quartet—MGM Island, The (Jap.)—Zenith It’s Only Money—Para. Jack the Giant Killer—UA Joseph and His Brethern—(Ital.)—Colorama t Jumbo—MGM Kill or Cure—(Br.)—MGM Legend of Lobo—Buena Vista Longest Day, The—Fox Make Way for Lila—Parade Releasing Marco Polo—Am. Inti. Modern Times—United Artists Mothra—Col. Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation—MGM Music Man—War. My Six Loves—Para. Mysterious Island—Col. Mystery Submarine—U-I Nikki, Wild Dog of the North—Buena Vista No Man Is An Island—U-I No Place Like Homicide (Br.)—Embassy Papa’s Delicate Condition—Para. Password Is Courage—MGM Phantom of the Opera—U-I Phantom Planet—Am. Inti. Pied Piper of Hamelin—Prod. Unlimited Pirates of Tortuga—Fox Purple Hills—Fox Queen of the Pirates—Col. Raven, The—Am. Inti. Reluctant Saint—Col. Ring a Ding Rhythm—Col. Road to Hong Kong—UA Runaway—Arpix Safe At Home—Col. Search for Paradise—Stanley Warner Sergeant Was a Lady—U-I Snake Woman—UA Story of the Count of Monte Cristo—War. Stowaway in the Sky—UA Swordsman of Siena—MGM Tarzan Goes to India—MGM Teenage Millionaire—UA Thief of Baghdad—MGM 300 Spartans—Fox 30 Years of Fun—Fox Three Stooges in Orbit—Col. Town Like Alice, A (Br.)—Rank Trojan Horse (Ital.')—Colorama Valley of the Dragons—Col. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea—Fox We’ll Bury You—Col. When the Clock Strikes—UA Wild Westerners—Col. Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm— MGM You Have to Run Fast—UA Young Guns of Texas—Fox Zotz—Cob CLASS A — Section II — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents All Night Long—Colorama Amazons of Rome (was: Virgins of Rome) (Ital.)—U A Antigone (Greek)—Ellis Films Atlantis, the Lost Continent—MGM Barabbas—Col. Beyond All Limits—Pathe-Am. Big Money—UA Billy Budd—AA Birdmen of Alcatraz—UA Bridge to the Sun—MGM Burn, Witch, Burn—Am. Inti. Burning Nights—UA Cat Burglar—UA Child Is Waiting, A—UA Convicts 4 (was Reprieve)—A A Court Martial (Ger.)—UA. Cow and I, The (Fr.)—Zenith Inti. Days of Wine and Roses—War. David and Lisa—Continental Diary of a Madman—UA Devi (Ind.)—Harrison Devil at 4 O’Clock—Col. (Ind.) Don’t Knock the Twist—Col. Dr. Blood’s Coffin—UA Electra—UA Escape From Zahrain—Para. Everybody Go Home (Ital.)—Davis-Royal Experiment In Terror—Col. Fear No More—Pathe-America Five Finger Exercise—Col. Flame in the Streets (Br.)—Atlantic Follow That Man—UA 40 Pounds of Trouble—U-I Frantic (Fr.)—Times Film Corp. Geronimo—UA Girls, Girls, Girls—Para. Guns of Darkness—War. Hands of a Stranger—AA Hook, The—MGM Horizontal Lieutenant—MGM Kid Galahad—UA Lawrence of Arabia—Col. Lion, The—Fox Lisa—Fox Lonely Are the Brave—U-I Long Absence (Fr.)—Commercial Pictures Loves of Salammbo—Fox Man Who Died Twice—Rep. Man Who Shot Liberty Valance—Para. Manster—UA Matter of Who (Br.)—Cardinal Miracle Worker—UA Murder on the Campus (Br.)—Colorama Mutiny On the Bounty—MGM Naked Edge—UA Night Creatures—U-I Pirates of Blood River—Col. Pit and the Pendulum—Am. Inti. Playboy of the Western World—(Br.)—Janus Premature Burial—Am. Inti. Requiem for a Heavyweight—Col. Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World Am. Inti. Sardonicus—Col. Savage Guns—MGM Scream of Fear—Col. Secret of Deep Harbor—UA Shame of the Sabine Women (Ital.)—U.P.R.C. Showdown—U-I Spiral Road—U-I Stagecoach to Dancer’s Rock—U-I State Fair—Fox Sword of the Conqueror—UA 13 West Street—Col. Tales of Terror—Am. Inti. Taras Bulba—UA Third of a Man—UA tTo Kill a Mockingbird—U-I Trunk, The—Col. Twenty Plus Two—AA Twist All Night—Am. Inti. Two Tickets To Paris—Col. Valiant—UA Weekend With Lulu—Col. Young Doctors—UA Young Ones—Para. CLASS A — Section III — Morally Unobjectionable (or Adults Ada—MGM Adventures of a Young Man—Fox All Fall Down—MGM And the Wild, Wild Women (Ital.)—Trans- Lux Armored Command—AA Baltic Express (Pol.)—Telepix Corp. Battle of Stalingrad (Swed.)—Trans-Lux Boys Night Out—MGM Breakfast At Tiffany’s—Para. Cairo—MGM Cape Fear—U-I Claudelle Inglish—War. Come September—U-I Counterfeit Traitor—Para. Couch, The—War. ♦Crime Does Not Pay (Fr.)—Embassy Critic’s Choice—War. Five Miles to Midnight—UA Great War, The—Lopert Hitler—AA IJorror Chamber of Dr. Faustus—UA Horror Hotel—Trans-Lux Hud—Para. Hustler, The—Fox If a Man Answers—U-I I Like Money—Fox Information Received (Br.)—U-I Interns—Col. 1 Thank a Fool—MGM Last Year At Marienbad (Fr.)—Astor Lovers of Teruel—(Fr.)—Continental Manchurian Candidate—UA Marriage of Figaro (Fr.)—Union Films Married Too Young—Headliner Money, Money, Money (Fr.)—Times Film Corp. Murder, Inc.—Fox Nine Hours to Rama—Fox Notorious Landlady—Col. On Any Street (was: La Notte Brava) (Ital.) —Miller One Plus One—Selected Pics. Only Two Can Play (Br.)—Col. Panic in Your Zero—Am. Inti. Period of Adjustment—MGM Pigeon That Took Rome—Para. Rebel with a Cause (was: Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner) (Br.)—Continental Ride the High Country—MGM Rider On a Dead Horse—A A Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)—Astor Rice Girls (Ital.)—Ultra Films Rome Adventure—War. Satan Never Sleeps—Fox Season of Passion—UA Secrets of Nazi Criminals (Swed.)—Trans-Lux Summer and Smoke—Para. Sundays and Cybele (Fr.)—Davis-Royal Susan Slade—War. Taste of Honey—Continental Term of Trial—War. Three On a Spree—UA Through a Glass Darkly (Swed.)—Janus Thunder of Drums—MGM Tower of London—UA Town Without Pity—UA Trial and Error—MGM Two for the Seesaw—UA Two Women (Ital.)—Embassy ♦Warriors Five—Am. Inti. West Side Story—UA Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?—War. ♦ Where the Truth Lies (Fr.)—Para. Who's Got the Action—Para. Wolf Larsen—AA Yojimbo—(Jap.)—Seneca Inti. CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part (or All Arturo’s Island—(Ital.)—MGM Back Street—U-I Bloody Brood, The—Pathe-Am. Brain That Wouldn’t Die—Am. Inti. Cabinet of Caligari—Fox Candide—(Fr.)—Union Films Chapman Report—War. Concrete Jungle—Fanfare Confession of An Opium Eater—AA Day the Earth Caught Fire—U-I ♦Diamond Head—Col. Doctor In Love—Rank Dr. No—UA Explosive Generation—-UA Firebrand, The—Fox Five Minutes To Live—Pathe-Am. Force of Impulse—Pathe-America Frightened City, The—A A Girl Named Tamiko, A—Para. Goodbye Again—UA Gypsy—War. Head, The—Trans-Lux House of Fright (was: Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll)—Amer. Inti. House of Women—War. It Happened In Athens—Fox Jessica—UA Joker, The (Fr.)—Lopert Journey to the Seventh Planet—Am. Inti. Kind of Loving, A (Br.)—Governor La Viaccia (Ital.)—Embassy Leda (Fr.)—Times Lover, Come Back—U-I Lovers On a Tightrope (Fr.)—Intcrworld Madame—(Ital.)—Embassy Man Trap—Para. Marines Let’s Go—Fox Mary Had a Little (Br.)—Lopert Maxine (Fr.)—Interworld Mongols—Colorama Night Is My Future (Swed.)—Embassy Night of Evil—Pathe-Am. No Exit—(Fr.)—Zenith Inti. No Love for Johnny (Br.)—Embassy Paris Blues—UA Passion of Slow Fire (Fr.)—Trans-Lux Payroll—A A Peeping Tom—Astor Private Lives of Adam and Eve—U-I Purple Noon (Fr.)—Times Shoot the Piano Player (Fr.)—Astor Siege of Syracuse—Para. Sodom and Gomorrah—Fox Splendor in the Grass—War. Summerskin—Angel T arta rs—MGM That Touch of Mink—U-I Tomorrow Is My Turn (Fr.)—Showcorp. Two Weeks in Another Town—MGM Vampire and the Ballerina—UA Very Private Affair—MGM Waitz of the Toreadors (Br.)—Continental War Lover, The—Col. White Slave Ship—Am. Inti. Wild Harvest—Pathe-Am. World by Night—War. CLASS C — Condemned And God Created Woman (Fr.)—Kingsley Baby Doll—War. Bed of Grass (Greek)—Trans-Lux Bcll’Antonio (Ital )—Embassy Films Boccaccio 70 (Ital.)—Embassy Breathless (Fr.)—Films Around World Cold Wind In August—Aidart Come Dance With Me (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl. During One Night (Br.)—Astor Exprcsso Bongo (Br.)—Continental Five Day Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley- Inti. Girl With the Golden Eyes (Fr.)—Union Film Green Carnation (was: Trials of Oscar Wilde) (Br.)—Warwick Films Green Mare (Fr.)—Zenith Heroes and Sinners (Fr.)—Janus I Am a Camera—DCA I Love, You Love (Ital.)—Davis-Roval Joan of the Angels?—Polish-Telepix Jules and Jim (Fr.)—Janus L’Avventura (Ital.)—Janus La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert Lady Chatterlcv’s Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley Lcs Liaisons Dangcreuscs (Fr.)—Astor Pic tures, Inc. Liane, Jungle Goddess—DCA Love Game (Fr.) - -Films Around World Love Is My Profession (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl. Lovers, The (Fr.)—Zenith Mademoiselle Striptease (Fr.)- DCA Magdalena (Ger.)—Buhawk Maid in Paris (Fr.)—Bellon-Foulkc Mating Urge—Citation Miller’s Beautiful Wife (Ital.)—DCA Mitsou (Fr.) — Zenith Inti. Mom and Dad (Sideroad)—Hallmark Prod. Moon Is Blue, The—UA Never On Sunday (Greek)—Lopert Nude Odyssey, The (Ital.)—Davis-Royal Odd Obsession (Jap.)—Harrison Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Four City Enterprises Passionate Summer (Fr.-Ital.)—Kingsley Phaedra (Gk.)—Lopert Port of Desire—Union Pot Bouillc (Lovers of Paris) (Fr.)— Continental Prime Time—Essanjay Films, Inc. Private Property—Citation Question of Adultery—NTA Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (Br.) — Continental Savage Eye—Trans-Lux-Kingsley Inti. Seven Capital Sins (Fr.)—Embassy Sins of Mona Kent—Astor Smiles of a Summer Night (Swedish)—Rank Talcs of Paris (Fr.)—Times Films Temptation (Fr.-Ital.)—Shelton Third Sex (Ger.)—D. & F. Dist. Too Young, Too Immoral—Rialto Int’l. Trials of Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Warwick Films Truth, The (La Verite) (Fr.)—Kingsley Inti. Viridiana (Sp.)—Kingsley Inti. Wasted Lives and The Birth of Twins— K. Gordon Murray Production SEPARATE CLASSIFICATION (A Separate Classification is given to certain films which, while not morally offensive in themselves, require caution and some analysis and explanation as a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclusions.) Adam and Eve (Mex.)—Wm. Horne Advise and Consent—Col. Anatomy of a Murder—Col. Case of Dr. Laurent (Fr.)—Trans-Lux Circle of Deception—Fox Cleo from 5 to 7 (Fr.)—Zenith Crowning Experience—MR A Devil’s Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy ♦Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films Freud—U-I Girl of the Night—War. Important Man (Mexican)—Lopert Intruder—Pathe-Am. King of Kings—MGM La Dolce Vita (Ital.)—Astor Pictures, Inc. Lolita—Seven Arts Long Day’s Journey Into Night—Embassy Martin Luther—de Rochemont Never Take Candy From a Stranger—Omar Corp. Pressure Point—UA Sky Above and the Mud Below, The (Fr.)— Embassy Storm Center—Col. Strangers in the City—Embassy Suddenly, Last Summer—Col. Too Young to Love—Arthur-Go Pictures, Inc. Victim (Br.)—Pathe-America Walk Qn the Wild Side-Col.