Southern cross. (Savannah, Ga.) 1963-2021, August 08, 1963, Image 6

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> # J PAGE 6—The Southern Cross, August 8, 1963 OH tL Si cope REV. HERBERT J. WELLMEIER The Sunday Gospel scene of Jesus weeping over the city of Jerusalem is a picture of com passion and yet of dire warning. And it has application and mean ing for all of us in the con temporary world. The words He mournfully sobbed out in a burst of patriotic love of His home land might well be addressed to the citizens of our beloved land, old and young. “If thou had known, in this thy day, even thou, the things that are for ^° NAt thy peace.” If the hope of the future is the youth of today, then at the same time the despair of the future likewise rests in the same hands of our youth. If they do not know the things that are for peace, the outlook for the future is dark, indeed. If young people are dedicated to the causes of justice and charity to all fellow citi zens, and to fellow human beings throughout the world, there is hope that a divinely-made peace will settle over the world. But, if our teenagers are confounding the mistakes of past genera tions by growing in habits of prejudice and hatred towards anyone here or abroad, then surely Jesus continues to weep at these sins that cry to hea ven for vengeance. America and the world might very well suffer the- fate of the ancient holy city of Jeru salem, where “the enemies will throw up a rampart about thee, and surround thee, and shut thee in on every side, and dash thee to the ground and thy children within thee.” Peace plans by the hundreds have been proposed and failed. Most civil leaders have failed to base them on the gospel message of the Prince of Peace. Papal peace plans almost by the dozens have gone unheeded, be cause of selfish interests and stubborn jingoism on the part of too many nations claiming to be Christian. But these fail ings are not alone on the big governmental level. The failure originates on the grass-roots level, are grounded in individual men, like you and me. Each per son must do their part in their own sphere, to be social con scious, to be aware of and better each human being with whom they come in contact. If there is not Christian justice and charity in the neighborhood the parish, the community, it will never just happen be tween nations. Even as we contemplate the touching scene of the God-man Jesus weeping over Jerusalem, we must pay heed to ‘ ‘the time of thy visitation.” To use a trite phrase, the sands of time are running out. While it is not a truism that the younger gen eration is going to the dogs, a prediction probably made first when Cain slew Abel, yet it is not beyond imagination that this could happen. A deluge wrecked the world once. Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed, Jerusalem was dashed to the ground, the glories of Rome perished. In our own little circle of contacts, then, all CYO mem bers, must do their bit, ful fill their obligation to society by a continuing drive for the triumph of char’’- 1 -tice Only this will comfort and console Christ, dry His tears as he weeps over our possible impending doom, and actually avert the tragedy that could be fall us if we pay no attention to the advance warnings given in the Gospel for our benefit. Christ’s message pleads, it seeks to touch the hearts of us all—TODAY! Maryknoll Says Priest’s Cuba Views His Own MARYKNOLL, N. Y., (NC)~ The Vicar General of the Mary knoll Fathers said here that statements attributed to a Maryknoll priest on conditions in Cuba are his personal views and not those of Maryknoll. Father John F. Donovan, M.M., Maryknoll Vicar Gen eral, was commenting on state ments about Cuba attributed to Father Felix McGowan, M.M. He said: “The Rev. Felix McGowan, M.M., is in Cuba explicitly against the instructions of the Superior General of Maryknoll (Bishop John W. Comber, M.M.) and any statements attributed to him are solely his own per sonal views and not those of the Maryknoll Fathers.” According to a news story from Havana, Father McGowan said in an interview with the Cuban newspaper El Mundothat reports circulating in the U. S. about persecution of the Church in Cuba are ‘ ‘very far from the truth.” A letter about Cuba signed by Father McGowan appeared in the July 29 New York Times. The letter denied the accuracy of reports concerning the visit to Cuba of 59 American students whose unauthorized trip has stirred indignation in this coun try. Father McGowan said in his letter that he was in Havana when the students arrived. He denied that Robert Williams, a Negro fugitive from a kidnaping charge, was on hand, at the air port to greet 10 Negroes in the group, and said Williams did not meet the students until two days later. He said that at the request of the students he accompanied the body of Hector Hill, a stu dent who drowned in an accident, back to the United States. He denied that the body was brought back by a Cuban air force plane. Instead, he said, it was flown back aboard a passenger plane. He said the U. S. State De partment had refused the Cu ban government’s request to fly the body to New York in a transport plane and instead would only allow the plane to land at the military airbase at Boca Chica near Key West, Fla. Father McGowan, 39, was born in New Rochelle, N. Y., October 14, 1923, and ordained June 10, 1950. Following his ordination he was assigned to mission work in Bolivia. He later was reassigned to the United States and engaged in student work. He helped or ganize groups of college stu dents to do summer welfare work in poor areas of Mexico. He was stationed in New York. Catholic Press Circulation Reaches Record A Maryknoll spokesman said the priest went to Cuba early in July to see for himself the situation of the Church there. “He absolutely was forbidden to go there and went against the wishes of his superiors,” the spokesman said NEW YORK, N. Y., (NC)—To tal circulation of 610 Catholic periodicals listed in the 1963- 64 Catholic Press Directory, official reference volume on the Catholic press in English- speaking North America, reached an all-time high of 28,847,343 at the beginning of 1963. The 1963-64 edition of the annual directory, published here by the Catholic Press As sociation, is highlighted by three new features: a 12-page map section with 10 geographi cal maps showing diocesan boundaries, newspapers serv ing each diocese, circulation and open line rates for each paper; a 10-page section listing 62 directories, including three national directories, 57 U. S. diocesan directories, and two diocesan directories outside the U. S. (only the three national directories and a handful of the diocesan directories had ever been listed in previous editions of the Catholic Press Direc tory); and three national supple ments available for diocesan newspapers, listed under a sep arate heading. Figures in the new directory show a circulation increase among newspapers of 241,091, the largest part of this increase (215,920) being reflected in U. S. papers. Total newspaper circulation in the U. S. is now 5,521,132, an increase of slight ly more than four per cent over the 1961 year-end figure con tained in last year’s directory. The North American total is 5,760,486. The sizeable increase in newspaper circulation was off set, however, by a slight de cline in magazine circulation, from 22,910,093 to 22,732,287. The largest decrease occurred in the category of professional and business magazines pub lished in the U. S., which show ed a decrease in number from 57 to 47, and a drop in circula tion from 552,814 to 371,802. A sizeable part of this decrease is explained, however, by the fact that several national and diocesan directories, formerly listed under the professional and business magazine heading, are now included in a separate directory listing. The new di rectory listing shows a total circulation of 354,570 for 62 publications. Another major area of cir culation decrease was in the consumer magazine category— the number of publications dropped from 60 to 57, and circulation decreased from 5,752,765 to 5,615,518. An increase was shown among 246 U. S. English-language ma gazines which do not accept advertising—the 246 publica tions listed a 1962-year-end circulation of 15,274,493 com pared to 230 magazines which listed a total circulation of 15,084,655 at the end of 1961. Total circulation of 286 North American magazines which do not accept advertising reached 16,379,276, an increase of 134,550 over the 1961 total. Praise Talk WASHINGTON, (NC) — New York’s two senators placed in the Congressional Record (July 29) an address by Francis Car dinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, condeming racial discrimination. Sen. Jacob K. Javits said the address is “particularly not able because it emphasizes the positive aspect of what is hap pening in our nation today in the drive for equal rights for all.” Sen Kenneth B. Keating said the Cardinal’s talk “will be an inspiration to all men of good will to work together to achieve liberty and justice for their fellow men,” i f v ELV TEACHERS TO PUERTO RICO—Members of the Lay Extension Volunteers leave Idlewild Airport for teaching assignments inPuerto Rico. They will be teaching in Aibonito, Ponce and Corozal. The young ladies and the colleges they attend are, left to fight: Joanne Barkley of Fayetteville, N. Y., St. Joseph’s College, Emmitsburg, Md.; Veronica Carroll of Bayside, N. Y., St. Joseph’s College, Emmitsburg, Md.; Diedere Carlin of Richmond Hill, N. Y., St. Joseph’s College, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Margaret DeRocco of Glencoe, Ill., St. Teresa College, Winona, Minn.; Patricia Quinn of Paterson, N. J., Caldwell College, Caldwell, N. J.; and Catherine Sciacca of Bayside, N. Y ( , St. Joseph’s College, Brooklyn, N. Y. At right is Msgr. S. F. Luecke of Oklahoma City, Okla., chair man of the field directors of ELV.—(NC Photos) Red Official Lauds Hungarian Prelate At Golden Jubilee By Deszoe Jambor BUDAPEST, (NC)—A Hunga rian government official has praised Bishop Endre Hamvas, of Csanad, acting head of the Hungarian Bishops’ Con ference, for showing “how peaceful coexistence between nations with different social systems is necessary and pos sible.” Imre Nagos, vice president of the government Office of Reli gious Affairs, spoke at a recep tion here (July 22) marking Bi shop Hamvas’ 50th priestly an niversary. Also present at the reception were other members of the Hun- gairan Hierarchy, Catholic lay leaders and newsmen. The 73-year-old Bishop said that he will keep on working “to avoid deterioration in Church-State relations” and will “try to continue to insure cooperation.” Bishop Hamvas—borninPis- zke, Hungary, in 1890—was or dained a priest July 15, 1913. He was consecrated Bishop of Csanad March 25, 1944 and served as Apostolic Admini strator of imprisoned Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty’s Arch diocese of Esztergomfrom 1951 to 1956. In October, 1961, the handful of bishops still free in Hungary elected Bishop Hamvas as their chairman. At the close of the Bishop’s Institute- (Continued from Page 2) Mrs. J. B. Tison; Foreign Relief, Mrs. W. P. Schneider; Historian, Mrs. Josephine Rol- linson; Home and School, Mrs. M. J. Prouty; Internal Re lations, Mrs. William Clark; Legislation, Mrs. Zoltan Far- kas; Libraries and Literature, Mrs. W. D. Tucker; Organiza tion and Development, Mrs. Eu gene Fitzpatrick; Radio, Mrs. W. C. Broderick; St. Mary’s Home Guild, Mrs. John M. Brennen; Spiritual Develop ment, Mrs. Richard McGuire; Notre Dame Book Shop, Mrs. Julian Halligan; and Public Re lations, Miss Margaret Murden. Guests at the board meeting were': Mrs. J. Edwin Mulligan, Mrs. A. B. Purdy, Miss Jo hanna Daly, Mrs. Francis Can- avan, Mrs.CluseMcElveen, and Mrs. Rudolf Heitmann. - -rU ' - . PORT CHAPLAIN MAKES FRIENDS—Father Thomas A. McDonough, C.SS.R., port chaplain at New Orleans exchanges - ^ stories with two sailors on a Green freighter. He is one of -* . • * Anl'ir ■f r\y -fill! t - ■? rn a nAV'f In a T Tni t* z'-x/'J CtntAC 1 c > ; only four full-time port chaplains in the United States, and is also secretary of the National Catholic Apostleship of the Sea, U.S.A. He is a native of St. Louis, Mo.—(NC Photos) I reply, those present stood for reading of greetings from His Holiness Pope Paul VI sent in a telegram by Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Secretary of State. Earlier, those honoring the Bishop attended a Mass he of fered in the Budapest Univer sity church. After congratulating Bishop Hamvas “in the name of the head of the government Office of Religious Affairs, in the name of the members of that office and for myself,” Nagos recalled his “personal and of ficial relation with Bishop Ham vas which goes back more than a decade.” Nagos also said that “re lationships of great significance have also developed between Bi shop Hamvas as an outstanding personality of the Hungairan Catholic Church and the Hun garian People’s Republic. . . “All peoples of the earth, including the hundreds of mil lions of Catholics, are occupied with great social problems. They are tasting the already realized new order of social ism and want to get to know it. “Bishop Hamvas is one of those leading churchmen who have heard and seen the great upheavals that are taking place in the world. . . “It is right that the whole world looks upon this Hun garian Catholic prelate who by his example and words shows how peaceful coexistence be tween nations with different social systems is necessary and possible.” He described this “peaceful coexistence” as a "correct, honorary relation ship which shows respect for the differing principles of men with different ideologies.” Bishop Hamvas, after ex pressing thanks for the cele bration, replied: “When one becomes president of the epis copate, he must deal with the affairs of the entire Hungarian Catholic Church. In this, I hope to find understanding and good will. “According to our doctrine, State and Church are complete societies. May God so will that both fulfil their tasks and that each support the other. “The Church is supporting the State by trying to educate virtuous citizens. And the State is supporting the Church by creating an atmosphere in which the free exercise of re ligion is possible. . .By work ing in this manner and spirit, we can render good service to the Church, the State, to the Hungarian people and to world peace.” iishop Hamvas recalled a trip he made to Moscow in July 1962 to attend a Soviet-sponso red World Peace Conference. “The vice president will re member how loathe I was to make that trip. Then he said to me: ’Go ahead, Bishop.’ I lis tened to him and it was good that I did so. I returned from Moscow with the best and most beautiful memories.” Bishop Hamvas attended the ecumenical council’s first ses- LATEST LEGION LISTINGS The CLASS A SECTION I Young and the Brave, CLASS A SECTION II The Man with the X-Ray Eyes CLASS A SECTION III V.I.P’s., The sion last fall and led a dele gation of Hungarian churchmen to the Vatican for the corona tion of His Holiness Pope Paul VI in June. One Word Decribes Chief Delinquency Factor-Cars KANSAS CITY, (NC)--Pat Finley sums up in one word the factor that contributes most to juvenile delinquency. The word is “Cars.”' He’s the juvenile probation officer for Wyandotte County, Kan. His files bulge with re ports and statistics that show better than 60 percent of the cases in juvenile court—inde pendent of traffic violations— are directly or indirectly the result of automobiles. “There is a direct ratio be tween automobiles in the hands of boys and their marks in school,” Finley said. “About 50 per cent of the boys we handle have dropped out of school. Many of these boys were ‘A’ and ‘B’ students in grade and junior high. Grade depreciation came only after they started driving their own car or one their parents—too generously —made available to them.” In his work, Finley handles boys up to the age of 16, in cases ranging from delinquen cy and miscreancy (compara ble to felony and misdemeanor in adult law) to dependency and neglect. He said: “There is no reason for a dependency and neglect case in any court. There is no outright poverty in this country in this age; there are too many agencies to look after the wel fare of the citizens. “A lot of these cases involve drinking parents, he con tin- ued. “But others are a result of the easy divorce laws, giving*, rise to a generation of father- ’ less children. It is not uncom mon for a 10 or 11-year-old to be making decisions for him self and his brothers that he normally wouldn’t be making until he was 18 or 19 years old.” U. S. Women To Meet In Germany B ERCHTESGADEN, Germany, (NC)—Some 500U.S. women stationed in Europe and North Africa are expected to attend the eighth annual conven tion of the Military Council of A Catholic Women to be held here from September 18 to 22 on the theme: “Leadership- Unity-Peace.” Among conven tion speakers will be U. S. - born Bishop John E. Taylor, O. M. I., of Stockholm. Pope Sees Delegate VATICAN CITY, (Radio, NC) — His Holiness Pope Paul VI has received Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate in the United States in private audience. LEGION OF DECENCY CLASS A — Section I — Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage Alsksxam, The Great—Am. Inti. Almoat Angels—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.)—Ajay Film Co. Drums of Africa—MGM Escape from East Berlin—MGM 55 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-I Gay Purree—War. Gidgct Goes to Rome—Col. Great Escape—UA Great Van Robbery—UA Hercules and the Captive Women (Ital.)— Pan-World Heroes Island—UA Honeymoon Machine—MGM tHow 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—U-I 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. Raiders of Leyte Gulf—Hemisphere Pictures Raven, The—Am. Inti. Reptilicus—Am. Inti. Savage Sam—Buena Vista Sergeant Was a Lady—U-I 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 Tarzan’s Three Challenges—MGM Teenage Millionaire—UA Thief of Baghdad—MGM 13 Frightened Girls—Col. 30 Years of Fun—Fox Ticklish Affair, A—MGM Titans, The—UA Traitors—U-I Two Daughters (Indian)—Janus Ugly American—U-I Valley of the Dragons—Col. Varan—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 the Way Home—Para. All Night Long—Colorama Amazons of Rome (was: Virgins of Rome) (ItaL)—UA Atlantia, the Lost Continent—MGM BUly Budd—AA Birds, The—U-I Black Fox—Capri Films Black Zoo—AA Bridge to the Sun—MGM Burning Court, The (Fr.)—Trans-Lux 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 Convict! 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 and the Hour, The—MGM Day of the Triffids—AA Daya 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 My Name Is Ivan (Russian)—Sig Shore Naked Edge—UA Old Dark House, The—Col. 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 Square of Violence—MGM Taras Bulba—UA Terror, The—Am. Inti. 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 Adalts Ada—MOM Armored Command—AA Baltic Express (Pol.)—Telepix Corp. Battle of Stalingrad (Swed.)—Trans-Lux Beach Party—Am. Inti. Big Risk, The (Fr.)—UA Breakfast At TiSany'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—I.opert 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.)—Tran»-Lui 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 Yojimbo—(Jap.)—Seneca Inti. CLASS A—Section IV——Morally Unobjectionable for Adults, with Reservations (An A-IV 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—MRA Devil’s Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy •Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films H'/i (Ital.)—Embassy Freud-—U-I 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 (Ifal.)—Astor Pictures, Inc. Lolita—Seven Arts Long Day’s Tourney Into Night—Embassy Martin Luther—de Rochemont Mondo Cane—Times Films Never Take 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, Victim (Br.)—Pathe-America Walk On the Wild Side—Col. CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for All Arturo's Island—(Ital.)—MGM Back Street—U-I Candide—(Fr.)—Union Films Cleopatra—Fox ♦Diamond Head—Col. Explosive Generation—UA Follow the Boys—MGM For Love or Money—U.I. Free, White and 21—Am. Inti. Girl Hunters, The—Colorama Features Goodbye Again—UA Head, The—Trans-Lux House of Fright (was: Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll)—Amer. Inti. In the Cool of the Day—MGM Irma La Douce—UA Island of Love—War. Joker, The (Fr.)—Lopert Kind of Loving, A (Br.)—Governor Landru (Fr.)—Embassy La Viaccia (Ital.)—Embassy Leda (Fr.)—Times Light Fantastic—Embassy M adame— (Ital.)—Embassy Main Attraction—MGM Man Trap—Para. Marilyn—Fox Marines Let’s Go—Fox Mary Had a Little (Br.)—Lopert Mongols—Colorama New Kind of Love, A—Para. Night Is My Future (Swed.)—Embassy No Exit—(Fr.)—Zenith Inti. Operation Bikini—Am. Inti. Paris Blues—UA Peeping Tom—Astor Private Lives of Adam and Eve—U-I Purple Noon (Fr.)—Times Rampage—War. 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 Wall of Noise—War. Waltz of the Toreadors (Br.)—Continental War Lover, The—Col. White Slave Ship—Am. Inti. Wild Harvest—Pathe-Am. Wives And Lovers—Paramount World by Night—War. CLASS C — Condemned And God Created Woman (Fr.)—Kingsley Baby Doll—War. Balcony, The—Continental 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.)—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-Royal Joan of the Angels?—Polish-Telepix Jules and Jim (Fr.)—Janus L’Awentura (Ital.)—Janus La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert Lady Chatterley’s Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley Law, The (Fr.)—Embassy Les Liaisons Dangereuses (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 Playgirl After Dark (Br.)—Topaz Films (Fr.)- Please, Not Nowl (Fr.)—Fox Port of Desire—Union Pot Bouille (Lovers of Paris) 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 Inti. Trials of Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Warwick Film* Truth, The (La Verite) (Fr.)—Kingsley Inti. Viridiana (Sp.)—Kingsley Inti. Wasted Lives and Th© Birth of Twin*— K. Gordon Murray Production Women of the World (Ital.)—Embassy