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

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    PAGE 2—The Southern Cross, March 16, 1963
WRITERS
AND
READERS
EDITED BY LEO J. ZUBER
2332 North Decatur Rd. Decatur. Georgia
ST. CATHERINE LABOURE
AND THE MIRACULOUS ME
DAL, by Alma Power-Waters,
Farrar, Straus and Cudahy,
1962, 189 pp., $2.25.
Reviewed by E. Matthews.
The hidden work of St. Cath
erine Laboure comes excitingly
to life in this book for young
people. From a quiet rural set
ting, Catherine is suddenly
transplanted to the bustling city
of Paris, a Paris torn with
petty wars and filled with vulgar
crowds. No one would have sus
pected that here she would find
the means to fulfill her religious
vocation and embark on the work
Our Lady wished her to do.
Since she had no education, she
was prepared to do only the kit
chen work and feed the convent
chickens, but Our Lady revealed
to her the Miraculous Medal.
NEW MEN FOR NEW TIMES,
Beatrice Avalos, Sheed&Ward,
1962, $3.75, 182 pp.'
SEEDS OF HOPE IN THE
MODERN WORLD, Barry Ulan
ov, Kenedy, 1962, 201 pp.
Reviewed by Flannery O’
Connor.
Both of these books are con
cerned with new times, one
with the education of the Chris
tians who will live in them, the
other with educating Christians
to value them.
After two chapters analyzing
the educational systems of Marx
and Dewey and their inadequate
ways of meeting the uprooted-
ness of modern man, Dr. Bea
trice Avalos in New Men For
New Times describes a Chris
tian conception of education, the
...fundamentals of which she takes
the principles and practices of
a contemporary movement of
Catholic action, the Schoenstatt
Apostolic Movement. Her gen
eral thesis is that the sound
exercise of activities on the
natural level is the way to lay
a solid, foundation for the action
of grace. She elucidates this
in relation to person, home
and school and provides the
philosophical background. This
book is written with intelligence
and considerable learning but
unfortunately with a heavy re
liance, particularly in the first
chapters, on the jargon held
dear in educational circles. The
rule is: if one work will do,
use four; thus “experience”
becomes “experiential contact
with reality.” Bastard words
are either borrowed or invent
ed, e.g., “educand”—an “edu-
cand” is presumably the vic
tim of an educator. A bone-
yard of dead or abstract or un
necessary phrases is thrown
up between the reader and the
thought. If this were not a bet
ter book than most in this
field, there would be no need
to complain about this, but there
is genuine danger that the read
er, unless he is a student of
education and thus habituated to
such, will quit the book half
way through, with the thought:
if they do this to the language,
what do they do to the child?
Dr. Ulanov's book, Seeds Of
Hope In The Modern World,
should serve as an antidote to a
tendency of Catholics to dis-
pise the modern world on prin
ciple and to condemn out of hand
anything that does not have ob
vious roots in the Middle Ag
es. The author points out that
“Mediation and contempla
tion in our time, like language
and thought, do not often follow
familiar paths. They could not,
for the remarkable meditative
minds of our time have looked
elsewhere than to the familiar
for their meditations. Or ra
ther, they have looked through
the familiar to the unfamiliar,
have looked with such inten
sity and ingenuity and patience
at the commplace that they have
discovered once again, as the
Greek and Latin Fathers and
the Renaissance humanists did
before them, how very uncom
mon it is.” Dr. Ulanov follows
some of these meditations as
they are found in modern lit—
..eraturq, art, music and science.
The procedure is much too rap
id to be satisfying, but the book
well achieves its purpose, which
is to suggest the potential pow
er of the modern world to lead
a man closer to God.
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COLUMBUS
^Triumph Of Charity’
Exemplified In Life Of
Blessed Mother Seton
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
Mother Elizabeth Bayley
Seton, the first native U.S. Ci
tizen to be declared Blessed,
squeezed into her relatively
short life of 47 years success
ful careers as a wife, mother,
educator, Religious and foun
dress of a religious com
munity.
The foundress of the Sisters
of Charity in this country, who is
being beatified in Vatican City
on March 17, was the mother of
five children and is responsible
for establishing the first free
Catholic school in the U.S.
The key to the outstanding
life of this convert to Catho
licism was her love for others.
“The triumph of charity is
Throughout her husband’s
illness, Elizabeth stayed close
to him and gave him spiritual
consolation. In a journal she
kept for her daugher, Rebecca,
there is the following entry
for November 24, 1803;
“How often I tell my William:
When you awake in that world
you will find that nothing could
tempt you to return to this.
You will see that your care over
your wife and little ones was
like a hand only, to hold the cup
which God Himself will give
if He takes you ...”
William Seton died on Decem
ber 27, 1803, and the Filicchi
family brought the young widow
and her child to their home. In
the midst of this devout family,
MOTHER ELIZABETH SETON
the great . ppem of Elizabeth
Seton,” said His Holiness Pope
John XXIII at the ceremony in
December, 1959, at which Mo
ther Seton was declared Vener
able.
Elizabeth Ann Bayley was
born in New York City on Aug
ust 28, 1774, the year of the
first Continental Congress. Her
father, Dr. Richard Bayley, was
a distinguished physician and
surgeon. Her mother, Catherine
Charlton, was the daughter of
Mary Bayeux and Rev. Rich
ard Charlton an Episcopal
minister.
Elizabeth was educated at a
private school in New York and
took a prominent part in the
social life of the day. But she
did not neglect her spiritual
development. Throughout her
life, as a Protestant and as a
Catholic, the Bible was a com
fort and joy to her. Later she
relied on it often in her con
ferences with her Sisters in
religion.
In 1794, at age 19, Elizabeth
married William Seton, son of a
wealthy merchant with ship
ping interests. Three girls and
two boys were born to the
couple, and their home life was
happy.
Anxieties and sufferings soon
afflicted them, however, Wil
liam Seton became ill, and his
business firm failed. In these
adverse circumstances, Eliza
beth became the support and
comforter of her husband and
the self-sacrificing provider
for her children.
William Seton’s illness, tu
berculosis, became worse, and
doctors recommended that he
take a sea voyage. Accompan
ied by their oldest child, Anna
Maria, the Setons set out in
October, 1803, for Leghorn, It
aly, where some business
friends, the Antonio Filicchis,
had invited them.
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Mrs. Seton saw for the first
time the Catholic religion lived
and practiced.
The urgency of her desire to
believe in Catholicism is re
counted in a sentence she put
down in her journal in early
1804;
* 'The other day, in a moment
of excessive distress, I fell on
my knees without thinking when
the Blessed Sacrament passed
by (in the street) , and cried
in an agony to God to bless me,
if He was there—that my whole
soul desired only Him.”
Elizabeth Seton was only 29
years old when she returned to
America in April, 1804. She had
no financial means, no prepara
tion for earning a living and
five children to support, the eld
est eight years old.
In addition, her announcement
that she was thinking of
becoming a Catholic caused a
shock in the genteel society of
New York of 1804, where the
unofficial “state religion” was
Episcopalianism. But Elizabeth
Seton never wavered, and on
March 14, 1805, she was re
ceived into the Faith by Father
Mathew O’Brien in St. Peters
Church, New York.
In the meantime she had se
cured employment in school
work, and with her small income
and the help of a few friends
and relatives she managed to
keep a home for her children.
In June, 1808, as the result
of the outcome of a plan sug
gested by Father (later Arch
bishop) Louis Dubourg, Eliza
beth Seton and her children
went to Baltimore, where she
opened an academy for girls.
Several young women soon join
ed in her project.
Archbishop John Carroll,
first Bishop and Archbishop of
Baltimore, gave approval to
Mrs. Seton to consecrate her
self to God in religious life,
and on March 25,1809, she pro
nounced her vows. On June 2,
1809, she and her four com
panions appeared for the first
time in public in their con
ventual habit.
With the expansion of its
work, the group moved to Em-
mitsburg, Md., where the foun
dation of the Sisters of Charity
in America began in its organi
zed form. Elizabeth Seton came
to be referred to as Mother
Seton.
There was some question at
first about harmonizing Mother
Seton’s duties as a mother of
five children and as head of
the community. Under a special
arrangement, she was per
mitted to continue with the
care of her children.
Mother Seton opened two
schools at Emmitsburg, an aca
demy for girls and a tuition
free school that was the fore
runner of the Catholic paro
chial school system of the U. S.
The early days of the com
munity were marked by poverty,
hardship and long hours of work.
In addition, two of Mother
Seton’s daughters died. But
throughout the years of trial
her courage and patience were
sustained by her faith and her
(Continued on Page 5)
Recalls How Irishmen
Befriended Mother Seton
By Thomas E. Kissling
St. Patrick’s Day—The great
day for the Irish, takes on add
ed significance this March 17
when American-born Mother
Elizabeth Ann Seton is beatified.
Her biographers have writ
ten much about the great influ
ence of the devout Catholic fam
ily of Felicchi in Italy, who be
friended the young widow when
her husband died there in 1803.
But little has been said about the
Irish in her life who aided and
guided her both before and af
ter her conversion to the Cath
olic Faith.
We have, for example, the
words of Mother Seton, in a
letter dated at Leghorn, Italy,
on January 3, 1804, whichmen-
tions that her charitable Roman
friends “have even taken the
trouble to bring me their best-
informed priest, Abbe (Peter)
Plunkett, who is an Irishman”
in an attempt to convert her.
It was a young Irish-born
curate at St. Peter’s Catholic
church on Barclay street, New
York, Father Michael O’Brien,
O.P., who had much to do with
counseling Episcopalian-rear
ed Mrs. Seton during the soul-
searching period the year pre
ceding her conversion. One of
the books he loaned her was Fa
ther Robert Manning’s “Eng
land's Conversion and Refor
mation Compared.”
On March 14, 1805, he re
ceived her formal abjuration of
Protestantism, in the presence
of her close Italian friend and
benefactor, Antonio Filicchi.
Mrs. Seton in a letter to his
wife, Mrs. Amabilia Filicchi,
immediately following the joyful
event, refers to Father O’Brien
as “the kindest, most respect
able confessor—with the com
passion and yet firmness in this
work of mercy which I would
have expected from Our Lord
Himself.”
Father Michael Hurley,
O.S.A., another young Irish
priest, who came to St. Peter’s
as a curate in July, 1805, took
a serious interest in her spir
itual and temporal affairs. He
aided her at her Confirmation
on May 26, 1806, and also re
ceived her sister-in-law Ce
celia Seton into the Church, and
instructed Anna Maria Seton,
oldest daughter of Mother Seton,
who in 1712 joined her sister
hood.
Mr. and Mrs. James Barry,
pious and well-to-do Catholics
of New York City, befriended
her from her conversion and re
mained loyal and helpful
friends. Among the many Irish
women to join Mrs. Seton in
the formation and expansion of
the first American religious
sisterhood, the Sisters of Mer
cy of St. Joseph at Emmits
burg, Md., were Cecelia O’
Conway and Maria Murphy of
Philadelphia.
Thomas Kelly of the faculty
of Georgetown College recom
mended and took a kindly in
terest in Mrs. Seton’s two sons,
William and Richard, during
their brief stay at that school
(1806-08). Captain and Mrs.
O’Brien of the American brig
Shepherdess who befriended the
Setons on their voyage to Leg
horn from New York in 1803
remained lifelong friends. They
are mentioned for their kind-
Latest
Listings
CLASS A SECTION 1
Man From the Diners Club
Bear, The
CLASS A SECTION II
Donovan’s Reef
Four Days of Naples
CLASS A, SECTION III
Love and Larceny
Quare Fellow, The
Trial, The
I Could Go On Singing
Spencer’s Mountain
CLASS B
Main Attraction
Follow the Boys
Island of Love
ness to her on her last sad
trip abroad.
It is said that Mrs. Seton’s
father, Dr. Richard Bayley,
physician and army surgeon and
first health officer of the Port
of New York, was stricken while
aiding the gravely ill from
a fleet of Irish immigrant ships
which brought a plague of yel
low fever to New York. He died
in 1801.
On the main bronze door of
St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New
York, is a full length relief
figure of Elizabeth Ann Bayley
Seton. It bears the title,
“Daughter of New York,” the
city where she spent the great
er part of her life. Partici
pants in the annual St. Patrick’s
Day parade there have add
ed cause to salute her as they
pass the church this year.—
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
Sterilization Bill
Called Assault On
Human Dignity
BALTIMORE, (NC)—A steri
lization bill proposed in Mary
land’ s House of Delegates con
stitutes “a grievous assault
upon the dignity of the human
being,” the newspaper of the
Baltimore archdiocese has sta
ted.
The Catholic Review says in
a front-page editorial (March 8)
that House Bill No. 563 “is one
of the most radical proposals
ever made to a state legis
lature.” The paper states the
bill “would authorize both vol
untary sterilization of adults
and compulsory sterilization of
certain persons under the age
of 21 years.”
In proposing legalization of
sterilization operations upon
persons 21 or over, the paper
continues, the only requirement
set forth in the bill “is that
the physician explain the mean
ing and consequences of the op
eration to the person to be
sterilized.”
“The mere whim of the adult
is sufficient reason for the op
eration under the terms of this
proposed legislation. A desire
to engage in promiscuous con
duct is sufficient reason under
the terms of this proposal.”
The paper says that the sec
ond portion of the bill “provides
for sterilization upon any per
son under the age of 21 years,
provided that the operation 'is
in the best interest of such
minor and society,’ and that the
person ‘is afflicted with any
hereditary form of mental ill
ness, mental deficiency or epi
lepsy.’ ”
“In effect,” the editorial
states, “this constitutes com
pulsory sterilization where the
wishes of the person to be
sterilized count for nothing.”
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LEGION OF DECENCY
CLASS A —Section I — Morally Unobjectionable tor C»eneral Patronage
Air Patrol—Fox
Alakazam, 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: Bov 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 Eartfy—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
+How The West Was Won—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 Brethcrn—(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.
Reptilicus—Am. Inti.
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
Seven Seas to Calais—MGM
Snake Woman—UA
Son of Flubbcr—Buena Vista
Story of the Count of Monte Cristo—War.
Stowaway in the Sky—UA
Swordsman of Siena—MGM
Tammy and the Doctor- U-I
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.
Titans, The—UA
Town Like Alice, A (Br.)—Rank
Trojan Horse (Ital.)—Colorama
\ alley 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—Col.
CLASS A — Section II — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents
All Night Long—Colorama
Amazons of Rome (was: Virgins of Rome)
(Ital.)—UA
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
Centurion (Ital.)—Altura Films
Child Is Waiting, A—UA
Convicts 4 (was Reprieve)—AA
Court Martial (Ger.)—UA.
Cow and I, The (Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
David and Lisa—Continental
Day of the Triffids—A A
Days of Wine and Roses—War.
Devi (Ind.)—Harrison
Devil at 4 O’Clock—Col. (Ind.)
Diary of a Madman—UA
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.
CLASS A —
Fear No More—Pathe-America
Fivz 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
Huns, The (Ital.)—Altura Films
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
Paranoiac—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.
Surdonicus—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
+To 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.
Section III —Morally Unobjectionable for 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.
Dime With A Halo—MGM
Fatal Desire—Ultra Films
Five Miles to Midnight—UA
Great War, The—Lopert
Hitler—AA
Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus—UA
Horror Hotel—Trans-Lux
Hud—Para.
Hustler, The—Fox
If a Man Answers—U-I
1 Like Money—Fox
Information Received (Br.)—U-I
Interns—Col.
1 Thank a Fool—MGM
Last Year At Marienbad (Fr.)—Astor
Love Is a Ball—UA
Love at Twenty (Fr.)—Embassy
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.
Monkey in the Winter (Fr.)—MGM
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
Rice Girls (Ital.)—Ultra Films
Ride the High Country—MGM
Rider On a Dead Horse—A A
Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)—Astor
Rome Adventure—War.
Satan Never Sleeps—Fox
Season of Passion—UA
Secrets of Nazi Criminals (Swed.)—Trans-Lux
Sparrows Can’t Sing (Br.)—Janus
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.
Winter Light (Swed.)—Janus
Wolf Larsen—A A
Yojimbo--(Jap.)—Seneca Inti.
CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for 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—AA
Girl Named Tamiko, A—Para.
Goodbye Again—UA
Gypsy—War.
Head, The—Trans-Lux
And God Created Woman (Fr.)—Kingsley
Baby Doll—War.
Bed of Grass (Greek)—Trans-Lux
Bell’Antonio (Ital.)—Embassy Films
Boccaccio 70 (Ital.)—Embassy-
Breathless (Fr.)—Films Around World
Cold Wind In August—Aidart
Come Dance With Me (Fr.)—Kingslev-Intl.
During One Night (Br.)- Astor
Exprcsso Bongo (Br.)—Continental
Five Day Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley- Inti.
Girl With the Golden Eyes (Fr.)—Union Films
Green Carnation (was: Trials of Oscar Wilde)
(Br.)—Warwick Films
Green Marc (Fr.)—Zenith
Heroes and Sinners (Fr.)—Janus
I Am a Camera—DCA
I Love, You Love (Ital.)—Davis-Royal
Joan of the Angels?—Polish-Telepix
Jules and Jim (Fr.)—Janus
L’Avventura (Ital.)—Janus
La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert
House of Fright (was: Two Faces of Dr.
Jckyll)—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 Yiaccia (Ital.) — Embassv
Leda (Fr.)—Times
Lover, Come Back—U-I
Lovers On a Tightrope (Fr.) - -Interworld
Madame—(Ital.)—Embassy-
Man Trap—Para.
Marine* 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
CLASS C — Condemned
Lady Chatterlcy’s Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley
Lcs Liaisons Dangcreuses (Fr.)—Astor Pic
tures, Inc.
Liane, Jungle Goddess—DCA
Love Game (Fr.) Films Around World
Love Is Mv Profession (Fr.)—Kingslev-Intl
Lovers, The (Fr.) Zenith
Mademoiselle Striptease (Fr.)- DCA
Magdalena (Ger.)—Buhawk
Maid in Paris (Fr.)—Bcllon-Foulke
Mating Urge—Citation
Miller’s Beautiful Wife (Ital.)—DCA
Mitsou (Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
Mom and Dad (Sidcroad)—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
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.
Summcrskin—Angel
Tartars—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 Tortadors (Br.)—Continental
War Lover, The—Col.
White Slave Ship—Am. Inti.
Wild Harvest—Pathe-Am.
World by Night—War.
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
Tales of Paris (Fr.)—Times Films
Temptation (Fr.-Ital.)—Shelton
Third Sex (Ger.)—D. & F. Dist.'
Too Young, Too Immoral—Rialto Int’I.
Trials of Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Warwick Films
Truth, The (La Verity) (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
aa 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
Geo 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 On the Wild Side—Col.