Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 6—The Southern Cross, July 18, 1963
Trailer Chapel Visits
Rural Georgia Towns
SAVANNAH—For the next
several weeks, the residents of
Screven, Jenkins, Burke and
Jefferson Counties will see
moving by their doors a some
what strange sight. Father John
Garvey and Father Frank Ellis,
pastor and assistant pastor re
spectively of Our Lady of the
Assumption Church inSylvania,
are presently involved in bring
ing a Catholic Trailer Chapel
to the attention of the people of
their four county parish.
An ordinary house-trailer
has been changed to a Chapel
with all the usual Church fur
nishings. The two priests take
the trailer into the smaller
towns and rural areas of their
parish in order to give the peo
ple a chance to see what the
inside of a regular Catholic
Church would be like.
The Glenmary Fathers atSyl-
vania are being greatly aided in
this outdoor apostolate by
volunteer lay members of the
Catholic Church. Members of
the Christian Family Move
ment, a lay organization with
headquarters in Chicago, volun
teer their usual summer vaca
tions to come South to help
in such apostolic activity.
The men and women bring
along their children as well as
their own missionhelpers or
baby sitters. Each group will
stay for an average of two
weeks, and at least one area is
visited weekly. The lay people
visit the stores and homes in
each selected area and invite
the townspeople to come and see
the trailer.
Signs, posters, and handbills
are means of advertisement,
supplemented by brief radio
for the attainment of large-
scale goods.” Perhaps then a
hero, the man of greatness, the
real individual, is one who goes
beyond himself, contributes ‘ ‘a
good” to the world, not for his
own glorification but the sanc
tification of the world. It would
be the theory of losing oneself
and finding oneself. The com
mon man becomes the uncom
mon man through his direction
of energy, his sanctification.
* * *
IF I WERE to contribute a
listing of individuals, heroes,
the greats of our time, there
are five which come to mind
immediately. I could easily add
to it for I do not think that the
substance of greatness is held
to any one time or place. As
God raises up His saints in
spot announcements as well as
by the Christian friendliness
of the volunteers themselves.
C. F. M. members from such
cities as Troy, New York, In
dianapolis, and Chicago have
been or will be on hand before
the program closes.
every time and for every need,
greatness, too, is never held
to one time and place. There
are giants of the spirit every
where in this age of space,
violence, fear, racial strife,
nuclear and atomic research.
Perhaps in Pope John, the whole
world has been given a view of
what man in the image and like
ness of God could be like. Here
was greatness. Here the Shake
spearean accolade was appli
cable: . .His life was gentle,
and the elements so mixed in
him that Nature might stand up
and say to all the world, ‘This
—was a man.’ ” It is difficult
to consider many meeting his
measurement. But in trying to
list a few of our time, those who
have been witnesses, those who
have been makers of the modern
mind in a positive sense, in a
striving for the common good,
I would list besides Pope John,
Dr. Tom Dooley, Caryll House-
lander, Anne Frank, James
Baldwin. From this list, we
could be taught, edified, in
spired.
HERE ARE the voices of my
selections and what they say,
as what they were and are
thunders:
Pope John: We will disappear,
our body will be dissolved, but
it is our preceding activity that
will count for the life to come.
Tom Dooley: All men yearn
to lose themselves in something
greater than themselves. Stand
up and shout 'This is my time
and my place in this time.’
And seek that place.
Caryll Houselander: I am
obsessed by the spirit of this
age with all its faults. I love
it and believe in it. I believe
that it is the most serious
duty I have to see, to recognize
Christ in it and to go on, never
to go back.
James Baldwin: It is the re
sponsibility of free men to trust
and to celebrate what is con
stant—birth, struggle, and
death are constant, and so is
love—and to apprehend the na
ture of change, to be able and
willing to change. I speak of
change not on the surface but in
the depths—change in the sense
of renewal. But renewal
becomes impossible if one sup
poses things to be constant that
are not—safety, for example,
or money, or power.”
Anne Frank: I still believe
that people are really good at
heart. . .if I look up into the
heavens, I think that it will all
come right, and that peace and
tranquility will return again.
QUESTION
BOX
(Continued from Page 4)
Raccolta, the Church’s official
handbook of indulgenced pray
ers.
* * *
Q. Why does the pope wear a
white cassock?
A. The white cassock now re
served, by ecclesiastical pro
tocol, to the supreme pontiff
alone, evidently had its origin
in the white habit worn by Pope
Pius V (1572-1585), who was a
member of the Dominican or
der. One of the great counter
reformation pontiffs, he was
canonized in 1712.
Q. Is ‘‘being ungrateful” a
sin?
A. ‘‘Being ungrateful” of
fends against the virtue of grati
tude, by which men are inclined
to recognize favors done. Being
ungrateful is somewhat like be
ing unwilling to repay a debt.
St. Thomas notes that the best
time to show one’s thanks is not
immediately after a favor has
been accorded (to do so then
would characterize thanks as
something due by virtue of a
strict contract), but on some
later occasion.
When approaching a bicycle
rider from behind, watch the
way he turns his head, traffic
police warn. The direction he
turns his head usually will cor
respond to the direction he
turns his bike.
IMPORTANT
Y NOTICE
Effective Wednesday, July 24,
1963, NANCY HANKS, Tr. 107, will
depart Savannah 6:40 A.M., instead
7:00 A.M., arrive Macon 10:25 P.M.,
instead 1:00 P.M. Corresponding
changes intermediate stations.
Central Of Georgia
Railway
Bonitz
Insulation
Co»
Of Georgia
Applicators Of
Vermiculite
Concrete Roof Decks
Gypsum Roof Decks
Acoustical Ceilings &
Cold Storage Insulations
OFFICES
SAVANNAH ALBANY
P. O. BOX 1517 1600 GARY AVE.
432-5207
(Continued from Page 4)
NUN-DOCTOR FROM CONGO--Mother Rivas of the Company of Mary—who runs Mater
Christi Hospital at Kyondo in the Congo, Leopoldville, and has performed over 8,000
major surgical operations there since 1956—during a visit to Archbishop Peter Sigis-
mondi, Secretary of the S. C. ‘‘de Propaganda Fide,” in Rome. Mother Rivas is on the
Archbishop’s left and Mother Vila, of the same Congregation, is on his right.—(NC
Photos)
WRITERS
AND
READERS
EDITED BY LEO J. ZUBER
2332 North Decatur Rd. Decatur. Georgia
THE EMERGING SOUTH by
Thomas D. Clark, Oxford Uni
versity Press, 1961, 286 pp.,
$6.00
Reviewed by Loras Walsh.
If you are interested in un
derstanding the trends of the
changing South, this is the book
for you! The author is a dis
tinguished Southern historian
and educator. Thomas D. Clark
grew up in rural Mississippi.
He is now Chairman of the De
partment of History at the Uni
versity of Kentucky. Mr. Clark
is not a sentimentalist. He
writes objectively, as an in
telligent moderate.
THE EMERGING SOUTH ex
plores the changes which have
taken place on many different
fronts in the region since the
year 1920. Mr. Clark sees
the crop year of 1920, when
cotton prices fell disasterously,
as a year of sharp transition.
In that year the farm furnishing
merchant with his usurious cre
dit system was dying out. Vir
gin timber was nearly exhaus
ted and the old, careless lum
bering practices could no long
er prevail. The automobile was
giving Southerners mobility.
The next forty years have
been years of change. Agri
culture has been revolutionized.
Industries have cdme into areas
where industry had been un
known. There has been a popu
lation shift from rural areas to
the cities. The public health
has been dramatically impro
ved. Federal funds have made
possible a great network of good
roads linking the South to all
of its sections and to the rest
of the nation. The lagging sou
thern educational system has
adopted national standards of
achievement as its ideal. The
courts have spoken out on the
race question. Mr. Clark writes
well of each of these phases
of progress.
THE EMERGING SOUTH
makes the reader aware of
the phenomenal progress the
South has made in the past
forty years. The author is hope
ful that the South will continue
its progress, ‘‘will claim its
share of the rest of this cen
tury.” But he emphasizes the
fact that success in the future
depends on an atmosphere of
social peace and moderation,
the qualities which have long
symbolized the South’s honor
and dignity.
Some knowledge of the facts
contained in this very readable
book is necessary to be an in
telligent citizen of the South.
WHAT IS THE BIBLE, by
Henri Daniel-Rops, Guild
Press, 1960, 188 pp., 85<£, and
FAITH, REASON AND THE
GOSPELS, edited by John J.
Heaney, S. J., Newman Press,
1962, 309 pp., $4.95cloth;$1.95
paper.
Reviewed by Flannery O’Con
nor.
In these days of renewed in
terest among Catholics in the
Bible and of considerable fer
ment in the field of Biblical
criticism, it is essential that
anyone interested in acquaint
ing himself with Biblical lit
erature, get started on the right
foot. Henri Daniel-Rops’ What
Is The Bible? is an adequate
short book for the beginner.
It is a volume of the Twentieth
Century Encyclopedia of Catho
licism here reprinted in a hand-
size 85<£ edition. It covers rap
idly the history of the creation
of the Bible, the times and
places in which it was written
and its authors. It is extreme
ly simplified and should neither
hold the student long nor satis
fy his curiosity on the subject.
Controversy is avoided.
Faith, Reason and the Gos
pels on the other hand is for
the mature student who is per
plexed by Biblical problems as
they relate to scientific method.
It is not designed for the non
believer but is meant to aid the
man of belief to a better
understanding of why he be
lieves. Eleven of the articles
included are by Catholics, four
by Protestants. The collection
grew out of and fulfills a dis
tinct need. Although summaries
of modern Christian thinking
regard to the gospels are avail
able, they are for the most part
confined to technical journals.
This collection brings together
in one volume such authorities
in the field of Biblical studies
fathers Jean Levie and
as
David Stanley and Messrs.
Floyd Filson and Archibald
Hunter. It is a fine book, not
easily exhausted.
ECUMENICAL-
(Continued from Page 1)
of the World Council of Church
es.
Dr. outler described the
change in relations among
Christians of different den
ominations as a shift from dis
putation to ‘‘ecumenical dia
logue.”
Thus, he said, the purpose of
the meeting here is ‘‘not to
dispute but to exchange ideas,
to seek and celebrate our
agreements, to deal honestly
and graciously with others.”
‘‘In our own century while
secular dogmatism has turn
ed our tortured world into a
snakepit,” he said, Christian
churchmen are learning ‘‘at
least a little to talk and work
together in a new spirit of
mutual recognition and dia
logue.”
Dr. Outler said that up to now
the method of study and dia
logue has succeeded well among
‘‘professional theologians” but
‘‘notably less well in episodic
mass conferences.” He said the
meeting here would be ‘‘an ex
periment in dialogue” to test the
method’s practicality among
larger groups.
He said the purpose of dele
gates should be to make it pos
sible to say that ‘‘at Montreal
we were enabled by the guidance
and power of the Holy Spirit to
reduce the area of our disa
greement on the one hand, and
on the other to expand the out
reach of ecumenical dialogue
in and between he churches.”
SURVIVAL
(Continued from Page 5)
the nights were freezing and she
could hear the howling of ani
mals, which probably were
wildcats.
‘‘I kept my constant vigil and
prayed my Rosary,” Mrs.
Tweed related. Eventually a
Civil Air Patrol plane spotted
her (July 5) in the semidesert
area on the 7,000-foot plateau
about six miles from here. She
was rescued by helicopter and
brought to Cibola Hospital.
LATEST
LEGION
LISTINGS
CLASS A, SECTION 1
A Ticklish Affair
Hercules and the
Captive Women
CLASS A, SECTION II
The Old Dark House
CLASS B
For Love or Money
Wives and Lovers
Wall of Noise
IJoutli
cop
e
REV. HERBERT J. WELLMEIER
It is truly a joy to be able
to write a weekly column on
a variety of topics. But when
the deadline stares you in the
face and no inspiration is forth
coming to provide the theme on
some given weekend, the ex
perience is rather frightening,
and the traditional butterflies
really give the digestive tract
a work-out. '‘What’ll I write
about this week? Hurry up,
brain, think of something before
the editor breathes fire. And try
to remember it is for the youth
of the diocese. Make it inter
esting and applicable to them.
So at the so-called ‘‘eleven
th hour” the thought struck. Of
all places it was in the cathe
dral, at a funeral talk by His
Excellency, Bishop McDonough.
The sad occasion was the burial
of his secretary, Mrs. Loretto
Flanagan. First he gave an ex
quisite development of the text,
‘ ‘The heart of man is made for
thee, Oh, God, and it is rest
less, till it rests in thee.” After
this, and in conclusion he spoke
eloquently of her accomplish
ments for her family and her
church. He summed up her
character in three descriptive
qualities, fidelity, loyalty and
devotion.
That was the moment when I
said to myself, ‘ ‘are there young
people maturing now, who will
be this type of lay apostle in
years to come?” I’m sure God
always provides when the ne
cessity arises. But, the admira
tion for such a person and the
sense of loss always causes
that gnawing concern.
I was privileged to know
Loretto and treasured the
friendship and acquaintance. I
observed her as the faithful
worker, devoted family head,
and loyal parishoner as the Bi
shop described. In my seven
years at the Cathedral, I never
knew her to miss daily mass
and Holy Communion. I witnes
sed her making the Novena each
week, the way of the Cross pri
vately and unobtrusively every
day of Lent. Her devotion to
family and intimate friends was
equally obvious and well-known.
And among the clergy her repu
tation for effficient and loyal
service at the Chancery office
was a frequent topic of admi
ring conversation.
The question is, how to de
velop these qualities in teen
agers, how to make them less
a rarity. How can we obtain
that these traits of character
are passed along to others
whose zealous efforts will be
indispensable for the future
growth of the church and
Christ’s Kingdom on earth.
When a deeply-mourned
soul enters into eternity, it is
important that all of us give
recognition to the sterling
facets of character we will miss
and call attention to the worthi
ness of imitation.
May God grant our dear friend
Mrs. Flanagan eternal rest. And
may she beg for us that He will
provide worthy successors in
the lay apostolate of our beloved
diocese of Savannah.
LEGION OF DECENCY
CLASS A — Section I — Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage
Alikazam, The Great—Am. Inti.
Almost Angela—Buena Vista
Assignment Outer Space—Am. Inti.
Bear, The (Fr.)—Embassy
Black Gold—War.
Boy Who Caught a Crook (Was: Boy Who
Found $100,000)— UA
Captain Sindbad—MGM
Capture That Capsule—UA
Cattle King—MGM
Constantine and the Cross—Embassy
Damn the Defiant (Br.)—Col.
Day Mars Invaded the Earth—Fox
Dentist in the Chair, A (Br.)— Ajav Film Co.
Drums of Africa—MGM
Escape from East Berlin—MGM
SS Days at Peking—AA
First Spaceship to Venus—Pan-World Films
Five Weeks in a Balloon—Fox
Flight That Disappeared—UA
Flipper—MGM
Francis of Assisi—Fox
Gathering of Eagles— U-1
Gay Purree—War.
Great Escape—UA
Great Van Robbery—UA
Heroes Island—UA
Honeymoon Machine—MGM
How The West Was Won—MGM
In Search of the Castaways—Buena Vista
Invasion Quartet—MGM
It’s Only Money—Para.
Jason and the Argonauts—Col.
Joseph and His Brethern— (Ital.)— Colorama
tjumbo—MGM
Kill or Cure—(Br.)—MGM
King Kong vs. Godzilla—U-I
Lafayette—Maco Films
Lassie’s Great Adventure—Fox
Legend of Lobo—Buena Vista
Lilies of the Field—UA
List of Adrian Messenger—IM
Longest Day, The—Fox
Make Way for Lila—Parade Releasing
Man From the Diner’s Club—Col.
t Miracle of the White Stallions—Buena Vista
Mouse on the Moon—UA
Murder at the Gallop (Br.)—MGM
My Six Loves—Para.
Mysterious Island—Col.
Mystery Submarine—U-I
Nikki, Wild Dog of the North—Buena Vista
No Place Like Homicide (Br.)—Embassy
Nutty Professor, The—Para.
Papa’s Delicate Condition—Para.
Password Is Courage—MGM
Phantom Planet—Am. Inti.
Pied Piper of Hamelin—Prod. Unlimited
Pirates of Tortuga—Fox
PT 109—War.
Purple Hills—Fox
Queen of the Pirates—Col.
Raven, The—Am. Inti.
Reptilicus—Am. Inti.
Savage Sam—Buena Vista
Sergeant Was a Lady—U-l
Seven Seas to Calais—MGM
Snake Woman—UA
Son of Flubber—Buena Vista
Summer Magic—Buena Vista
Swordsman of Siena—MGM
Tammy and the Doctor—U-I
Teenage Millionaire—UA
Thief of Baghdad—MGM
13 Frightened Girls—Col.
30 Years of Fun—Fox
Titans, The—UA
Traitors—U-I
Two Daughters (Indian)—Janus
Ugly American—U-I
Valley of the Dragons—Col.
\ aran—The Unbelievable—Pan-World Films
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea—Fox
When the Clock Strikes—UA
You Have to Run Fast—UA
Young Guns of Texas—Fox
CLASS A — Section II — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents
All Night Long—Colorama
Amazons of Rome (was: Virgins of Rome)
(Ital.)—U A
Atlantis, the Lost Continent—MGM
Billy Budd—AA
Birds, The—U-I
Black Fox—Capri Films
Black Zoo—AA
Bridge to the Sun—MGM
Call Me Bwana—UA
* Castilian, The—War.
Cat Burglar—UA
Centurion (Ital.)—Altura Films
Charade—U-I
Child Is Waiting, A—UA
Come Fly With Me—MGM
Convicts 4 (was Reprieve)—AA
Court Martial (Ger.)—UA.
Courtship of Eddie’s Father—MGM
Cow and I, The (Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
David and Lisa—Continental
Day of the Triffids—AA
Days of Wine and Roses—War.
Devi (Ind.)—Harrison
Devil at 4 O’Clock—Col. (Ind.)
Diary of a Madman—UA
Donovan’s Reef—Para.
Dr. Blood’s Coffin—UA
Duel of the Titans—Para.
Electra—UA
♦Erik, The Conqueror—Am. Inti.
Everybody Go Home (Ital.)—Davis-Royal
Flame in the Streets (Br.)—Atlantic
Four Days of Naples (Ital.)—MGM
40 Pounds of Trouble—U-I
Frantic (Fr.)—Times Film Corp.
Fury of the Pagans—Col.
Girls, Girls, Girls—Para.
Good Soldier, Schweik (Ger.)—Lionex
Guns of Darkness—War.
Harbor Lights—Fox
Hook, The—MGM
House of the Damned—Fox
Huns, The (Ital.)—Altura Films
It Happened at the World’s Fair—MGM
Just For Fun—Col.
Kiss of the Vampire—U-I
♦Lancelot and Guinevere—U-I
Lawrence of Arabia—Col.
Lazarillo (Spanish)—Union Films
Long Absence (Fr.)—Commercial Pictures
Miracle Worker—UA
Murder on the Campus (Br.)—Colorama
Mutiny On the Bounty—MGM
Naked Edge—UA
Paranoiac—U-I
Play It Cool—AA
Pit and the Pendulum—Am. Inti.
Playboy of the Western World—(Br.)—Janus
Samson and the Seven Miracles of the World
Am. Inti.
Sanjuro (Jap.)—Toho Inti.
Sardonicus—Col.
Scream of Fear—Col.
Secret of Deep Harbor—UA
Showdown—U-I
Slave, The—MGM
Stagecoach to Dancer’s Rock—U-I
Taras Bulba—UA
Thrill of It All—U-I
fTo Kill a Mockingbird—U-I
Trunk, The—Col.
Twenty Plus Two—AA
Twice Told Tales—UA
Weekend With Lulu—Col.
Werewolf in a Girls’ Dormitory—MGM
Yellow Canary—Fox
Young Doctors—UA
Young Racers, The—Am. Inti.
CLASS A — Section III —Morally Unobjectionable for Adnlts
Ada—MGM
Armored Command—AA
Baltic Express (Pol.)—Telepix Corp.
Battle of Stalingrad (Swed.)—Trans-Lux
Big Risk, The (Fr.)—UA
Breakfast At Tiffany’s—Para.
Bye, Bye, Birdie—Col.
Caretakers—UA
Cairo—MGM
California—Am. Inti.
Claudelle Inglish—War.
Come Blow Your Horn—Para.
Come September—U-I
Corridors of Blood—MGM
Couch, The—War.
♦Crime Does Not Pay (Fr.)—Embassy
Critic’s Choice—War.
Crooks Anonymous (Br.)—Janus
Day in Court, A (Ital.)—Ultra Films
Dime With A Halo—MGM
Fatal Desire—Ultra Films
Five Miles to Midnight—UA
Great War, The—Lopert
Heavens Above (Br.)—Janus
Hud—Para.
Hustler, The—Fox
I Could Go On Singing—UA
In the French Style—Col.
Love and Larceny (Ital.)—Major Films
Love at Twenty (Fr.)—Embassy
Love Is a Ball—UA
Lovers of Teruel—(Fr.)— Continental
Magnificent Sinner—Film-Mart, Inc
Manchurian Candidate—UA
Marriage of Figaro (Fr.)—Union Films
Mind Benders, The—Am. Inti.
Money, Money, Money (Fr.)—Times Film
Corp.
Monkey in the Winter (Fr.)—MGM
Nine Hours to Rama—Fox
One Plus One—Selected Pics.
Panic in Your Zero—Am. Inti.
Passionate Thief (Ital.)—Embassy
Period of Adjustment—MGM
Police Nurse—Fox
Quare Fellow (Irish)—Astor
Rebel with a Cause (was: Loneliness of the
Long Distance Runner) (Br.)—Continental
Rice Girls (Ital.)—Ultra Films
Rififi in Tokyo—MGM
Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)—Astor
Season of Passion—UA
Secrets of Nazi Criminals (Swed.)—Trans-Lux
Sparrows Can’t Sing (Br.)—Janus
Spencer’s Mountain—War.
Summer and Smoke—Para.
Sundays and Cybele (Fr.)—Davis-Royal
Susan Slade—War.
Term of Trial—War.
Three On a Spree—UA
Thunder of Drums—MGM
Town Without Pity—UA
Toys in the Attic—UA
Trial, The—Astor
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.
Winter Light (Swed.)—Janus
Wrong Arm of the Law (Br.)—Continental
^ ojimbo—(Jap.)—Seneca Inti.
CLASS A—Section IV—
( An A-IV Classification is given to certain films
as a protection to the uninformed against wrong
Morally Unobjectionable for Adults, with Reservations
which, while not morally offensive in themselves, require caution and some analysis and explanation
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—MRA
Devil’s Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy
•Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy
Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films
S'/i (Ital.)—Embassy
Freud—U-!
Girl of the Night—War.
Important Man (Mexican)—Lopert
Intruder—Pathe-Am.
King of Kings—MGM
L-Shaped Room, The Columbia—Davis-Royal
La Dolce Vita (Ital.)—Astor Pictures, Inc.
Lolita—Seven Arts
Long Day’s Journey Into Night—Embassy
Martin Luther—de Rochemont
Mondo Cane—Times Films
Never lake Candy From a Stranger—Omar
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.
\ictim (Br.)—Pathe-America
Walk On the Wild Side—Col.
Arturo’s Island—(Ital.)—MGM
Back Street—U-I
Bloody Brood, The—Pathe-Am
Candide—(Fr.)—Union Films
Chapman Report—War.
Cleopatra—Fox
Day the Earth Caught Fire—U-I
♦Diamond Head—Col.
Dr. No—UA
Explosive Generation—UA
Firebrand, The—Fox
Five Minutes To Live—Pathe-Am.
Follow the Boys—MGM
Force of Impulse—Pathe-America
Free, White and 21—Am. Inti.
Frightened City, The—AA
Girl Hunters, The—Colorama Features
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.
In the Cool of the Day—MGM
Irma La Douce—UA
CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for All
Island of Love—War.
Jessica—UA
Joker, The (Fr.)—Lopert
Journey to the Seventh Planet—Am. Inti.
Kind of Loving, A (Br.)—Governor
Landru (Fr.)—Embassy
La Yiaccia (Ital.)—Embassy
Leda (Fr.)—Times
Light Fantastic—Embassy
Lover, Come Back—U-I
Lovers On a Tightrope (Fr.)—Interworld
Madame—(Ital.)—Embassy
Main Attraction—MGM
Man Trap—Para.
Marilyn—Fox
Marines Let’s Go—Fox
Mary Had a Little (Br.)—Lopert
Maxine (Fr.)—Interworld
Mongols—Colorama
New Kind of Love, A—Para.
Night Is My Future (Swed.)—Embassy
Night of Evil—Pathe-Am.
No Exit—(Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
No Love for Johnny (Br.)—Embassy
Operation Bikini—Am. Inti.
Paris Blues—UA
Passion of Slow Fire (Fr.)—Trans-Lux
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.
Stripper, The—Fox
Tartars—MGM
That Touch of Mink—U-I
Temptress and the Monk (Jap.)—Hakim Pro
ductions
Time Out For Love (Fr.)—Zenith
Tomorrow Is My Turn (Fr.)—Showcorp.
Two Weeks in Another Town—MGM
Vampire and the Ballerina—UA
Very Private Affair—MGM
Waltz 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.)—Kingslev
Baby Doll—War.
Balcony, The—Continental
Bed of Grass (Greek)—Trans-Lux
lidl'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
Expresso 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 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.)—Janqs
L'Avventura (Ital.)—Janus
La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert
Lady Chatterley's Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley
Law, The (Fr.)—Embassy
Les Liaisons Dangereuset (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-Foulke
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
Playgir! After Dark (Br.)—Topaz Films
Please, Not Now! (Fr.)—Fox
Port of Desire—Union
Pot Bouille (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’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