Southern cross. (Savannah, Ga.) 1963-2021, August 22, 1963, Image 6

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I PAGE 6—The Southern Cross, August 22, 1963 Bishops Urge Argentina’s New Government To Tackle Urgent Problems At Once BUENOS AIRES, (NC) — The Bishops of Argentina have asked the country’s new government headed by President-elect Ar turo Illia, to tackle immedia tely such urgent problems as AT WORLD FAMILY CONFERENCE—More than 400del egates from 22 countries at the 14th International Conference on the Family attended a Mass by Papal Nuncio Archibhsop Armando Lombardi, in Rio’s Franciscan Church, It was part of the Catholic-sponsored but ecumenically opened Interna tional Union of Family Organizations, In the photo, Governor Carlos Lacerda of Guanabara State (Rio) greets the leader of the ICF, Martin Donath of Germany and Lucien Gui- bourguo of France, IUFO president.—(NC Photos) employment, the high cost of living and low salaries. “There must be started, at the cost of sacrifices and re nunciations, a national recon struction in moral, social and constitutional order,’’ they said in a statement. “It is fitting not to forget that the problem of a return to the constitutional order has been solved through the good sense of the people,’’ the Bi shops said. “As shepards of souls we stand at the service of our people in the religious and moral order. As citizens we feel the responsibility to serve. And at this hour of reconstruction we make public our aim to collaborate, while always remaining with our peo ple, in the mutual talk the re public requires of us.” The Bishops said their pro gram is inspired by “the mag nificent encyclicals of John XX- III.” They also called for an am nesty for political prisoners Because of upheavals in Argen tina in the past two years there are many of these prisoners. The amnesty called for would presumably include former president Arturo Frondizi, who is now being detained onMartin Garcia Island in Argentina. President-elect Illia said: “I am totally in agreement with the message of the Bishops. We loyally trust in the valuable contribution of Argentine spiri tual forces.” Jottings (Continued from Page 4) that squeak, listening to complaints, spike heels, door bells, alarm clocks, cole slaw, wearing rubbers, people who deposit vigil light money during Mass. There must be more? IN COMMON with most everyone in this cold, cruel world, I also dislike or detest, if you like, sin and suffering even through along with the rest of the world I have a part in both. There is something that can be done about the former but not much about the latter. I don’t mind critical letters and I still like Bermuda shorts despite the recent comment. In writing a column, you must be true to yourself or there is nothing worth the saying. As Tom Sullivan once wrote in his Catholic Worker column many years ago in the matter of writing a coulmn: “You pray that you don’t sound like a phoney. And that you don’t disgust people with religion or religious people. You ask God that you be sincere in all that you say. You beg God to stay your hand from offending readers with a holier than thou attitude. And that you are constantly aware of each and every one of your sins with every breath you take.” Amen. IJouth cop e REV. HERBERT J. WELLMEIER What kind of a woman do our teen age girls hope to be? What kind of a wife is a fellow ■ ONAt. r/a *Al searching for? Every man seeks a spouse who would be like a rare treasure from far-away places. He wants to trust his Dept >osed Leader Free BRAZZAVILLE, Congo Re public, (NC)—Alphonse Mas- samba-Debat, head of the pro visional government which top pled the regime of President Fulbert Youlou in a coup d’etat August 15, said the latterwould be allowed “to return to private life like any other Congolese citizen.” Columbus \ Columbus v Fish Company FISH IS OUR MIDDLE NAME Retail-Wholesale Restaurant / ■ 3800 River Road Columbus, Georgia For Home Delivery Call FA. 3-3651 COLUMBUS, GA. whole heart to her, and doesn’t care nearly as much about any thing else. For the right gal will bring him contentment, not grief. Certainly, his ideal must be an industrious housekeeper, skilled in home economics, like a merchant ship, she must ply about, buying skillfully, mana ging to hunt bargains and run the home econimically. Lazi ness has no place, for she ought to be an early riser, who pre pares his breakfast even at dawn. One sign of her femini ty might well be a love of flower gardens that she her self plants and cultivates. Because marriage makes many demands, she will need courage and tirelessness to be gin each day refreshed and zea lous. She knows hard work pays off and so she never complains of her duties, but keeps the home fires bright and warm. She doesn’t even mind making her own clothes, realizing that mostly only career girls can af ford chic Paris creations. A generous and kindly heart is what he seeks, and one who has a genuine pity on the unfor tunate and downtrodden, not a “social do-gooder,” but an interested civic-minded person who will contribute real effort to noble causes. He would like to be sure that hardship and misfortune will not frighten or dismay her, the wintry blasts of meagre paychecks will stimulate her imagination to stretch provisions to do some how. Our man will want his wife to be proud of him, for nothing gives him a feeling of being needed, nothing satisfies just ifiable male ego like a spouse who thinks there is none so great in the land as him. If she can save a few pennies out of household expense for pin money, that will please him greatly, Down on the farm they call it “butter and egg” money. A good reputation and strong virtuous character are essen tial points he looks for. Of a happy disposition, she greets each day with a smile, carry ing no grudges, no hard feel ings, but possesses an even temper and good sense of humor. Such a woman will be blessed with a happy marriage. Her husband will sing her praises and her children will bring credit to her as the most blessed of mothers. Many women would rely on other charms to snare a hus band; this homemaker sur passes them all. Physical beau ty alone is empty. Engaging per- sonalies not rooted in virtue and self-disciplined character are a shell without substance, doomed to unhappiness as the years go by. The God-fearing woman is the treasure to be sought. All the world recognizes her as a prize. If the above description sounds almost Biblical, it is. Were you to compare it to Pro verbs, Chapter 31, verses 10- 13, you would note it is simply the same ideas with modern adaptation. The church uses this passage as the Epsitle for the Feast of St. Anne, and other housewives. Our young la dies of today would do well to train themselves in the pat terns drawn by the mother of Mary and similar saints. MASS IN HONOR OF ST. STEPHEN — Americans of Hungarian origin observed the 925the anniversary death of St. Stephen of Hungary. Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Han nan celebratdd a Mass and gave a sermon in St. Patrick’s Church, Washington, D. C. He is shown with Cecilia Kari- kas Bros (left) and Felice Kolodinsky who placed floral bouquets on the staffs of the flags used on the occasion.— (NC Photos) 400 Years Old In 1965 Nombre De Dios Oldest Mission In America ST. AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA. The old Spanish Mission of Nombre de Dios in this historic city preserves the landing site of America’s first Founding Fathers, and the spot on which stood the first Christian Mis sion and Parish in this country. Fully 55 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, 40 years before the Eng lish settled Jamestown, 210 years before the American Revolution, Admiral Menendez and Father Lopez succeeded in founding this nation’s firstper- menent European settlement and Christian community. From that time on St. Au gustine and Nombre de Dios were regularly occupied, The settlement became a town, and then a city. At Nombre de Dios a Mission was founded, from which hundreds of priests and laymen advanced into the track less continent. Both City and Mission stand today as the cra dle of American Christian civi lization. Because our nation’s found ing began with an act of reli gion, the historian John Gil- mary Shea rightly said: “The altar is older than the hearth.” Today on the old Mission grounds a rustic altar com memorates that first Mass. The pioneer Father Lopez is mem- oralized in an heroic statue executed by the late Yugoslav scupltor, Ivan Mestrovic. A small chapel stands where the first Mission chapel was built four centuries ago. In “Bricks And Mortar” Bill House Firmly Backs Inclusion Of Church-Related Colleges WASHINGTON, (NC) — The House firmly supported the place of church-related col leges in Federal aid to higher education when it approved a $1,195 billion “bricks andmor- tar” bill. By a vote of 287 to 113, the House approved (Aug. 14) a three-year program to help all accredited colleges and univer sities finance new classrooms, libraries and laboratories not to be usedfor sectarian instruc tion. The bill provides that colleg es can seek either an outright grant for one-third of the cost of a construction project or a 50-year, low-interest loan for up to 75 per cent of cost. Aid requests would be channeled through special state com missions which will assign pri orities. Although the chamber has approved in the past a var iety of aid programs whose re cipients included church-relat ed institutions, the debate on the college bill marked one of the few times it has engaged in pro longed and lively discussion on the issue. The measure now goes to the Senate. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield on Montana said he thought it has a “goodchance,” although the Senate education subcommittee has yet to finish work on its Senate version. The House rejected two am endments related to the Church -State question. It turned down by a voice vote a proposal to insert a clause designed to en courage a Supreme Court test of the constitutionality of aiding education in church-related colleges. It also voted down, by a non- recorded vote of 136 to 62, a move to confine the bill’s as sistance to public institutions. The legislation does stipulate that the Federal funds cannot be used to help build facilities to be used for sectarian insturc- tion, religious worship or “primarily” for a program of a school or department of divin ity. With the backing of House Democratic and Republican leaders, a bipartisan team re presenting the committee which wrote the bill defeated a series of crippling amendments. The so-called “judicial re view” amendment, introduced by Rep. John B. Anderson of Ilinois, was voted down after Rep. Charles E. Goodell of New York told the House it amount - PRISON CHAPLAINS PLAN CONGRESS—Discussing plans for the Congress of Corrections to be held in Portland, Oregon, August 25 to August 31 are, left to right: Bishop Andrew G. Grutka of Gary, Indiana, Episcopal Advisor of the American Catholic Correctional Chaplains Association; Father Carl Breitfeller, O. P., Washington, D. C., Depart ment of Corrections, President of the American Correc tional Chaplains Association (Inter-Faith group) and Father Cyril F. Engler, Catholic chaplain, Iowa State Men’s Refor matory, Anomosa, Iowa, secretary-treasurer, A.C.C.C.A. —(NC Photos) ed to abdication of legislative responsibility and asks the Su preme Court: “Will you please come in and tell us whether we are doing right or wrong?” The amendment to strike pri vate colleges from the bill was introduced by Rep. D. R. Mat thews of Florida. He said there will not be enough tax money to take care of public education if private institutions are assis ted. Rep. Albert Quie of Minnes ota responded that the Matthews amendment would be “unwise public policy.” It would suddenly penalize private col leges and universities, he said. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell of New York, chairman of the- House Education Committee, said that “private schools are the backbone of American high er education.” The Matthews amendment, he added, “would pull the rug out from under high er education.” Rep. Edith Green of Oregon sponsor of the measure, noted that of the 2,100 colleges in the United States, more than 1,300 are privately operated. Of the private schools, she said, 482 are Protestant and 335 are Ca tholic. Defenders of including pri vate and other church-Pelat- ed colleges in the measure ar gued that their inclusion has been a Federal policy for de cades. Their determination to illus trate this was pointedly shown when they dealt with an objec tion of Rep. W. R. Poage of Tex as. Poage, noting he was a grad uate of Baylor University, Waco, Tex., said he thought Baylor and other church-rela ted institutions should not be assisted by tax funds. He call ed it a “plain and flagrant perversion of the proper func tion of government. The question of Federal as sistance for church-related and other private elementary and secondary schools did not play a major part in the debate. Supporters of college aid urg ed that aid to private grade and high schools was a different matter. They said there is a lengthy history of Federal as sistance to all types of colleg es. However, when Quie inci dentally remarked that aid to church-related elementary and secondary schools was un constitutional, he was checked by Rep. William T. Cahill of New Jersey who insisted that “men of great renown in con stitutional law” have expressed an opposite opinion. Last year, the House approv ed a similar college assistance bill by a vote of 319 to 79. But the Senate added a pro gram of student scholarships. 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 Running Man, The CLASS A SECTION 4 This Sporting Life CLASS B Johnny Cool Of Love and Desire Shock Corridon The House defeated this version by a vote of 214 to 186. In addition to the House’s refusal to approve student aid, another factor in last year’s defeat was the strong opposi tion of the powerful National Education Association. The NEA argued that the bill’s provisions for aid to church-related institutions im periled proper relations be tween Church and State. It did not press this claim this year. Thousands of visitors come to the Mission annually to pay reverence to the spot where their national heritage began. In the Quadricentennial year i 1965 the Mission will exhibit its store of original Parish Regis ters dating from 1594—oldest written records of any kind in the United States. A libraby and exhibition hall will be built to house these and other histori cally important documents and maps from the Mission’s ear liest days. In the adjoining waters where the Spanish ships lay at anchor 400 years before, a towering illuminated Cross—a Beacon of the Faith—will rise in 1965 to remind men, on land and at sea, of our nation’s religious beginnings. The Cross will be built with funds contributed by \ people from every part of the United States. TERMITES SWARMING? LEGION OF DECENCY CLASS A — Section I — Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage Al»lt«r«m The Greet—Am. Inti. Almoit Angels—Buena Viite Assignment Outer Space—Am. Inti. Beer, 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. Gidget 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 Atlantis, 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 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 and the Hour, The—MGM 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. LazariUo (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 Atnlts Ada—MOlt 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 Tiffany's—Para. Bye, Bye, Birdie—Col. Caretakers— UA Cairo—MGM California—Am. Inti. Claudelle lnglish—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. Film 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 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 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 a_nd_ 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 Qeo from 5 to 7 (Fr.)—Zenith Crowning Experience—MRA Devil’s Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy •Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films H/j (Ital.)—Embassy -Lopert Freud—U-I Girl of the Night—War. Important Man (Mexican)- 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 Stranger—Omar Never Take Candy From 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-Am erica Walk On the Wild Side-Col. CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for All Arturo's Island—(Ital.)—MGM Back Street—U-I Candlde—(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 Viacda (Ital.)—Embassy Leda (Fr.)—Times Light Fantastic—Embassy Madame— (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.)—Time* 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 Pive 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-Intk 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 Now I (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-JUngsley 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. It F. Dist. Too Young, Too Immoral—Rialto Inti. 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