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PAGE 6—The Southern Cross, January 9, 1964
For Pope Paul
Cenacle Provides
Sacred Memories
JERUSALEM, Israel (NC) --
A flood of sacred memories
swept through the mind of Pope
Paul VI as he entered the
“upper room” or Cenacle du
ring his visit here.
This is traditionally regard
ed as marking the spot where
Christ instituted the Eucharist
with the words: "This is my
body. . . This is my Blood.”
Just one month earlier Pope
Paul had promulgated the new
constitution on the liturgy which
is aimed at making the sacred
ness and beauty of the Eucharist
more meaningful to Catholics
throughout the world.
The Cenacle also served as
the site where Christ enunciated
two great principles of His new
way of life: peace and charity.
These two ideas have serv
ed as key points of papal mes
sages throughout the Christian
era as Christ’s vicars pre
scribed remedies for the mala
dies of mankind. They were the
key thoughts in the first Christ
mas message of Pope Paul.
It was in the Cenacle that
Christ told his Apostles as they
were gathered around the table
at the Last Supper:
“Peace I leave you. My peace
1 give you. Not as the world
gives do I give to you.”
After His Resurrection,
Christ again entered the same
room through locked doors and
His first words to the fright
ened Disciples were: “Peace
be with you.”
In setting forth His doctrine
of charity, Christ told His Dis
ciples in the Cenacle at the
Last Supper:
“This is my commandment,
that you love one another as
I have loved you. . .
By this will all men know
that you are my Disciples, if you
have love for one another.”
The Cenacle was also the set
ting for Christ’s prayer for
unity which has become the
motto of the ecumenical move
ment sweeping Christian bodies
throughout the world. The pray
er was quoted by Pope Paul
in his Christmas message as
he explained that one reason for
visiting the Holy Land was to
pray for Christian unity.
Christ’s prayer in the Cen
acle was: “That all may be one,
even as Thou, Father, in me
and I in Thee; That they also
may be one in us.”
But the Pontiff’s sacred
memories as he prayed in the
Cenacle must have been tinged
with sorrow as he recalled the
checked history of the holy
shrine, which has not been in
Christian hands for more than
five centuries.
The Cenacle was used as a
general gathering place for
Christians in the first days
after Christ’s Ascention. It
was here that the Holy Ghost
descended on the Apostles on
Pentecost. It came to be used
'as a church and was spared
destruction when Roman Em
peror Titus practically' leveled
Jerusalem in 69-70 A.D.
At the time of St. Cyril of
Jerusalem (347) it was known
as the “upper church of the
Apostles”—“upper” because it
was situated on Mount Sion,
and therefore higher than the
Basilica of the Holy Sepulcher.
It was also the episcopal church
until 335.
Under Archbishop John II of
Jerusalem (386-417) a splen
did basilica, “the Holy Sion”,
was erected on the site of the
primitive Cenacle. This was de
stroyed by the Persians in 614.
It was partially restored be
tween 631 and 634, and de
stroyed again by the Saracens
in 966.
After their arrival in 1099,
the crusaders rebuilt the edi
fice and named it ' ‘St. Mary
of Mount Sion” in memory of
the adjacent sanctuary dedica
ted to the “Dormition” or Fal
ling Asleep of Our Lady.
The Franciscans obtained
charge of the shrine in 1342
at the direction of Pope Cle
ment VI and with the permis
sion of the sultan of Jerusa
lem. However, the reigning sul
tan expelled the Franciscans
in 1551, and the Moslems split
up the church in various ways,
making a mosque out of the
“upper room,” During the 1948
Palestine war the Cenacle was
wrested from the Moslems and
fell into Israeli hands.
During the last century and a
half that the Moslems held the
shrine, Catholics, represented
by the Franciscans, visited the
Cenacle twice a year: on Holy
Thursday and Pentecost, in
memory of the Last Supper and
the Descent of the Holy Ghost.
However, during the last 30
years they were prevented from
kneeling, later from singing
hymns, or praying in the upper
room.
Mass was offered furtively
on rare occasions during Mos
lem tenure of the shrine. The
privilege was given to a few
visiting dignitaries after the
Moslem custodians had made
what they insisted were “cost
ly” arrangements.
Today the Cenacle is in the
charge of the Israeli ministry
for religious affairs. Pilgrims,
who ask for the privilege, are
given entry to the shrine and
may pray there.
Clergy, Government
Discuss Renewal
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (NC;—
About 150 church, government
and education leaders will ga
ther at the Harvard University
Divinity School Jan. 29 to 31
to discuss a stronger role for
churches and synagogues in ur
ban renewal.
Sen. Joseph C. Clark of Pen
nsylvania, former Mayor of
Philadelphia, will speak on
“Church and Synagogue in Ur
ban Renewal.”
Obituaries
T. E. Masters
SAVANNAH—Funeral serv
ices for Theodore Edward (Ted
dy) Masters were conducted
January 4th at the Sacred Heart
Church with the Reverend Ter
ence Kernan, O.S.B. officiating.
Survivors include his wife,
. 3^ IN AUGUSTA
MEMORIALS
S.R. KELLY & SON, INC.
PA 2-6972
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Mrs. Anna Callaway Masters;
a daughter, Mrs. Michael S.
Robertson; a brother, Harry
Masters; a sister, Mrs. Joseph
P. Griffin, and six grandchild
ren.
Albert Joy
. 1 , Columbus
Fish Company
FISH IS OUR MIDDLE NAME
Retail-Wholesale
Restaurant
3800 River Road
Columbus, Georgia
AUGUSTA—Funeral serv
ices for Albert Joseph Joy were
conducted January 6th at the
Sacred Heart Church with the
Very Reverend Felix Donnelly
officiating.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. May Shaw Joy.
Mrs. McCarthy
AUGUSTA—Funeral serv
ices for Mrs. John J. McCarthy
were conducted January 7th at
the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church with the Very Reverend
F elix Donnelly officiating.
Survivors include her hus
band, John J. McCarthy Sr.,
Augusta; two daughters, Miss
Mary Patricia McCarthy and
Miss Elsie Jean McCarthy, both
of Augusta; one son, John J.
McCarthy Jr., Augusta; and a
number of aunts.
Arthur Geeks
SAVANNAH—Funeral serv
ices for Arthur Geeks were con
ducted January 6th at the Cathe
dral of St. John the Baptist with
the Reverend Lawrence A. Lu-
cree officiating.
Survivors include two sis
ters, Mrs. Mary M. Bunger and
Mrs. Lelia Hansen and several
nieces and nephews.
THE POPE ON THE VIA DOLOROSA. Jordanian police and soldiers were hard put to
make a passage for Pope Paul VI as he walked the Way of the Cross immediately follow
ing his arrival in Jerusalem (Jan. 4) on his historic visit to the Holy Land. The Pontiff’s
white skull cap may be seen in the upper right portion of the picture. He prayed at various
Stations as he traced the way Christ carried His cross to Calvary. — (NC Photos)
God’s World—
(Continued from Page 4)
ject to evolution as man grows
in scientific knowledge. No, our
dogmas are absolutely true as
they stand and very necessary
for keeping us religiously “on
course” and protecting us
against gross error.
But, for all their factualness,
dogmas simply cannot impart
an experiential knowledge of
the reality which underlies the
dogma. There is and must be an
enormous gap between the ver
bal statement of the truth, and
the truth as it exists in its
three-dimensional being. A
simple example will illustrate
this.
Webster’s dictionary defines
color, objectively, as “A quali
ty of visible phenomena, distinct
from form and from light and
shade.” The dictionary defines
color, subjectively, as, “A sen
sation evoked as a response to
the stimulation of the eye and its
attached nervous mechanisms
by radiant energy of certain
wave lengths and intensities.”
These definitions are precise
expressions of the truth. Yet,
if we were to quote them to a
man born blind, we know that he
would remain quite unmoved. If
that same man were suddenly
to receive his eyesight while
standing in a field of wild
flowers, facing a crimson and
purple sunset, he surely would
cry out to us, “Why didn’t you
tell me that color would be like
this!”
Similarly, as we receive the
supernatural power of vision
which is called the Light of
Glory, we shall be tempted to
cry out to God, “Why didn’t you
tell me that You would be like
this!” God would have to ans
wer, as we would answer the
blind man, “I tried to tell you,
but of course you really could
not understand without seeing.”
Manifestly, this imagined dia
logue with God is whimsical. In
heaven, we shall be much too
busy loving God to indulge in
such asides.
Two conclusions emerge
from what we have said. The
first conclusion is that it is
absurd for us to let ourselves
be troubled by temptations
against faith on the score that
there are points in our religion
which we cannot understand.
God being Who He is, how could
we hope really to understand?
The second conclusion is that
no amount of book knowledge
can bring us to a confrontation
with God as He actually is.
It is only in prayer that we can
encounter God, that we can
experience God. Without medi
tative prayer our knowledge of
God must remain theoretical
and our service of God perfunc
tory. In prayer, our apprehen
sion of God still will be “through
a mirror in an obscure man
ner,” but even that much of a
glimpse can be enough to trans
form our lives.
Father Gustave Weigel
Dies Of Heart Attack
NEW YORK (NC)—Father
Gustave Weigel, S. J., 57, one
of the U. S. Church’s best known
figures in the ecumenical move
ment, died unexpectedly at the
Jesuit Father’s Campion House
here of a heart attack.
Father Weigel, a professor
since 1942 at Woodstock (Md.)
College, a Jesuit seminary, was
a pioneer in taking part in “dia
logue” sessions with non-
Catholic Christians.
Requiem Mass was offered
(Jan. 7) at Woodstock for the
repose of the soul of the theo
logian who died (Jan. 3) while
resting at the Jesuit residence
between sessions of an inter
faith conference. Burial also
was at Woodstock.
Celebrant of the Mass was
Archbishop Lawrence J. She-
han of Baltimore. Present
in the sanctuary were Arch
bishop Patrick A. O’Boyle of
Washington and Auxiliary Bi
shops T. Austin Murphy of Bal
timore and Philip M. Hannan
of Washington.
He attended both sessions of
the Second Vatican Council, act
ing as translator for English-
speaking observer - delegates
from other churches.
At the second session, he
took part daily in the U. S.
Bishops’ press panel which pro
vided newsmen with background
and clarification of the issues
raised at the council.
Father Weigel, who had an
encyclopedia store of know
ledge and a quick wit, was born
in Buffalo, N. Y. He studied at
Woodstock and at the Gregorian
University, Rome.
Ordained on June 25, 1933,
at Woodstock, he was first as
signed to the Catholic Univer
sity of Chile where he served
until 1948 when he returned to
Woodstock.
Father Weigel was a prolif
ic writer and speaker on inter
faith relations. He took part in
dozens of interfaith gatherings,
wrote frequently for the Catho
lic press and authored numer
ous books, including one, “Am
erican Dialogue,” with Robert
McAfee Brown, Protestant pro
fessor of religion at Stanford
(Calif.) University. The two men
won the 1960 Brotherhood Award
of the National Conference of
Christians and Jews for the
book.
A frequent theme in his ad
dresses was that dialogue be
tween churches does not com
promise belief. “This dia
logue,” he said, “is the very
foundation of ecumenism and
experience has shown that there
is nothing to fear when it is
carried on in a spirit of char
ity and prayerfulness.”
“God will have to bring about
unity,” he stated, “but man
must take certain preliminary
steps, hoping and praying that
God will see fit to use these
human efforts at reunion as an
instrument for the ultimate un
ity of Christianity.”
In September, 1960, at the
height of the debate centering on
the religion of the late Presi
dent Kennedy, then Democra
tic nominee, Father Weigel
drew national attention with a
Washington speech expressing
“desperation” at the failure of
some non-Catholics to believe
Catholics when they say they do
not wish to infringe on the re
ligious freedom of others.
Citing U. S. Catholic testi
mony from Revolutionary War
times to the present on Chruch
-State relations, Father Weigel
declared:
“I just cannot see what more
assurance non-Catholic Ameri
cans can ask of Catholics. Offi
cially the really American Ca
tholics do not want now or in
the future a law which would
make Catholicism the favored
religion of this land.
"They do not want the relig
ious freedom of American non-
Catholics to be curtailed in any
way. They sincerely want the
present First Amendment to be
retained and become evermore
effective. With a note of desper
ation, I ask, what more can we
say?”
Father Weigel was the first
Catholic to give a series of lec
ture at the Yale Divinity School,
the Taylor Lectures, in 1960.
In 1962, Yale honored him with
an honorary Doctor of Divinity
degree with the following cita
tion: “You have broken through
the Reformation wall and pion
eered in Catholic-Protestant
.dialogue.”
Georgia is first in the pro
duction of marble, of a
quality recognized as the
world’s finest.
LATEST
LISTINGS
CLASS A, SECTION I
Thomasina
Goliath and The Sins of
Babylon
CLASS A, SECTION II
Ladybug, Ladybug
Ladies Who Do
Surf Party
Children of The Damned
Life in Danger
CLASS A, SECTION III
America, America
Mail Order Bride
Move Over Darling
Strait-Jacket
Dead Ringer
CLASS B
Four For Texas
Soldier in the Rain
Viva Las Vegas
CLASS C
An Affair of the Skin
U. S., Latin America Move
To Invigorate 44 Alliance”
By J. J. Gilbert
WASHINGTON (NC) — While
President Johnson has moved
here to coordinate U. S. aid to
Latin America, Latin Ameri
cans themselves have moved
decisively to give vigor and au
thority to Alliance for Progress
efforts.
President Johnson has named
Thomas C. Mann, U. S. Ambas
sador to Mexico, to head up the
Latin American work here.
South Americans of ministerial
level met in Sao Paulo, Brazil,
at the end of November to setup
the Committee for the Alliance
(CAP). In Spanish, it is called
the Comite Interamericano de
la Allianza para el Progreso.
It is intended that CAP will
have power not only to coordin
ate, but also to execute, and
that, in this latter respect, it
will be an improvement over
the “nine wise men,” a purely
advisory group which hereto
fore has functioned under the
Inter-American Committee for
Socio - Economic Development
of the Organization of American
States.
Because it is honed the com
mittee will give definite impe
tus to the combined work for
Latin American progress, a
search is on for a good man to
head it. The feeling here is
he should be a Latin Ameri
can. Some of those most pro
minently mentioned to date are:
Alberto Lleras - Camargo,
former president of Columbia
and onetime general secretary
of OAS, who is said to have de
clined for reasons of health.
Raul Prebish, Argentine ec
onomic expert now with the UN
who is presently engaged in
planning a world conference on
commerce and production for
Geneva in the Spring of 1964.
Antonio Carrillo Flores,
Mexican lawyer and Ambas
sador to the U.S. He is charac
terized here as being a member
of the militant secularist group
now ruling Mexico.
Antonio Ortiz Mena, Mexican
financial expert.
Galo Plaza, a liberal and for
mer Brazilian Ambassador to
the U.S.
Romulo Betancourt, out
going president of Venezuela,
moderate leftist.
Jose Figueres, former pres
ident of Costa Rica and an ec
onomist now lecturing at Har
vard.
Rafael Caldera, head of the
Christian Democrat Party in
Venezuela, a Catholic sociolo
gist of solid reputation in La
tin America, and one of the four
experts who drafted the Punta
del Este Charter, the basis
for the Alliance. He is thought
to be acceptable to authorities
here, and the fact that he has
not been president of any La
tin American country could be in
his favor.
Mention of the name of Cal
dera recalls that the Chris
tian Democrats are emerging in
Latin America as a solution to
stalemates created by strug
gles between ultra-conserva
tives and extreme leftists, in
cluding communists. In 1963,
they increased their seats in the
Brazilian Congress from 7 to
25; doubled their vote in Argen
tina; represented a strong op
posing force to the military in
the Dominican Republic; be
came the strongest party in
Chile’s municipal elections and
stands a good chance to carry
the 1964 presidential election;
increased their vote 10% and
are now in the government in
Peru; surged from 420,000
votes in 1958 to 810,000 in 1963
in Venezuela (Caldera’s COPEI
party); are winning control of
University organizations from
communists in Argentina, Bra
zil, Bolivia, Chile, Peru, Mex
ico, the Dominican Republic,
El Salvador and elsewhere.
/
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LEGION OF DECENCY
CLASS A — Section I
* -urr
Raiders, The (Br.)—U-I
Al&kazam, The Great—Am. Inti.
Angel in a Taxi—Magna Films
Assignment Outer Space—Am. Inti.
Black Gold—War.
Boy Who Caught a Crook (Was: Boy Who
Found $100,000)— UA
Brass Bottle—U-I
Captain Sindbad—MGM
Capture That Capsule—UA
Cattle King—MGM
Crimson Blade (Br.)—Col.
Dentist in the Chair, A (Br.)—Ajay Film Co.
Drums of Africa—MGM
SS Days at Peking—AA
First Spaceship to Venus—Pan-World Films
Flight That Disappeared—UA
Flipper—MGM
Francis of Assisi—Fox
Gathering of Eagles—U-I
Gidget Goes to Rome—Col.
Great Escape—UA
Hercules and the Captive Women (Ital.)—
Pan-World
Honeymoon Machine—MGM
CLASS A — Section II-
— Morally Unobjectionable for
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Three Stooges Go Around
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
tHow The West Was Won—MGM
Incredible Mr. Limpet, The—War.
Invasion Quartet—MGM
It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World—UA
Jason and the Argonauts—Col.
King Kong vs. Godzilla—U-I
Lafayette—Maco Films
Lassie’s Great Adventure—Fox
Lilies of the Field—UA
List of Adrian Messenger—U-I
McLintock—UA
t Miracle of the White Stallions—Buena Vista
Mouse on the Moon—UA
Murder at the Gallop (Br.)—MGM
My Son, the Hero—UA
Mysterious Island—Col.
Nikki, Wild Dog of the North—Buena Vista
Nutty Professor, The—Para.
Pied Piper of Hamelin—Prod. Unlimited
Pirates of Tortuga—Fox
PT 109—War.
Purple Hills—Fox
Queen of the Pirates—Col.
General Patronage
the World in a Daze, The—Columbia
Raiders of Leyte Gulf—Hemisphere Pictures
Savage Sam—Buena Vista
Sergeant Was a Lady—U-I
Siege of the Saxons (Br.)—Col.
Snake Woman—UA
Summer Magic—Buena Vista
tSword in the Stone—BV
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
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 and the Brave, The—MGM
Young Swingers, The—Fox
Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Captain Newman, M.D.—U-I Seven Days in May—Paramount
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
All the Way Home—Para.
Amazons of Rome (was: Virgins of Rome)
(Ital.)—UA
Any Number Can Win (Fr.)—MGM
Atlantis, the Lost Continent—MGM
Billy 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
Chanide—U-I
Chushingura (Jap.)—Toho Inti.
Come Fly With Me—MGM
Convicts 4 (was Reprieve)—AA
Courtship of Eddie’s Father—MGM
Cow and I, The (Fr.)—Zenith Inti.
Day and the Hour, The—MGM—
Devil at 4 O’Clock—Col. (Ind.)
Dr. Blood’s Coffin—UA
Duel of the Titans—Para.
♦Erik, The Conqueror—Am. Inti.
Family Diary (Ital.)—MGM
Frantic (Fr.)—Times Film Corp.
Fury of the Pagans—Col.
Fury of Smuggler’s Bay (Br.)—Embassy
Gone Are the Days—Hammer Bros.
Good Soldier, Schweik (Ger.)—Lionex
Guns of Darkness—War.
Harbor Lights—Fox
Haunted Palace, The—Am. Inti.
Haunting, The (Br.)—MGM
Hide and Seek (Br.)—U-I
Hootenanny Hoot—MGM
House of the Damned—Fox
Householder, The—Col.
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
Life in Danger—AA
Lord of the Flies—Walter Reade-Sterling
Mary, Mary—War.
Miracle Worker—UA
Mutiny On the Bounty—MGM
My Name Is Ivan (Russian)—Sig Shore
Naked Edge—UA
Nightmare—U-I
Old Dark House, The—Col.
Play It Cool—AA
Pit and the Pendulum—Am. Inti.
Sanjuro (Jap.)—Toho Inti.
Sardonicus—Col.
Scream of Fear—Col.
Secret of Deep Harbor—UA
Slave, The—MGM
Sound of Trumpets (Ital.)—Janus
Square of Violence—MGM
Stolen Hours—UA
Suitor, The (Fr.)—Atlantic
Terror, The—Am. Inti.
Thrill of It All—U-I
Thunder Island—Fox
Trunk, The—Col.
Twenty Plus Two—AA
Twice Told Tales—UA
Two Nights With Cleopatra—Ultra Films
War is Hell—AA
Weekend With Lulu—Col.
Werewolf in a Girls’ Dormitory—MGM
Wheeler Dealers—MGM
X—The Man With the X-Ray Eyes—Am. Inti.
Yellow Canary—Fox
Young Doctors—UA
Young Racers, The—Am. Inti.
Man’s Favorite Sport—U-I
Ada—MGM
Angels of Darkness—Thalia Films
Armored Command—AA
Beach Party—Am. Inti.
Big Risk, The (Fr.)—UA
Breakfast At Tiffany’s—Para.
Bye, Bye, Birdie—Col.
Cardinal, The—Col.
Caretakers—U A
California—Am. Inti.
♦Ceremony, The—UA
Claudelle Inglish—War.
Come Blow Your Horn—Para.
Come September—U-I
Condemned of Altona—Fox
Corridors of Blood—MGM
Couch, The—War.
Crooks Anonymous (Br.)—Janus
Day in Court, A (Ital.)—Ultra Films
Dr. Crippen (Br.)—War.
CLASS A — Section III — Morally Unobjectionable for Adnlts
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Love With the Proper Stranger—Para.
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Fun in Acapulco—Para.
Great War, The—Lopcrt
Gunfight at Comanche Creek—AA
Heavens Above (Br.)—Janus
Hellfire Club—Embassy
Hustler, The—Fox
In the French Style—Col.
Leopard, The—Fox
Magnificent Sinner—Film-Mart, Inc.
Maniac—Col.
Marriage of Figaro (Fr.)—Union Films
Mind Benders, The—Am. Inti.
Money, Money, Money (Fr.)—Times Film
Corp.
Muriel (Fr.)—UA
Nine Hours to Rama—Fox
One Plus One—Selected Pics.
Panic in Your Zero—Am. Inti.
Passionate Thief (Ital.)—Embassy
Pink Panther—UA
Police Nurse—Fox
Prize, The—MGM
Pyro—Am. Inti.
Rififi in Tokyo—MGM
Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)-
Running Man, The—Col.
Season of Passion—UA
Summer and Smoke—Para.
Susan Slade—War.
Take Her, She’s Mine—Fox
Three On a Spree—UA
Thunder of Drums—MGM
Town Without Pity—UA
Toys in the Attic—UA
Twilight of Honor—MGM
Two Are Guilty—MGM
Two Women (Ital.)—Embassy
V.I.P.’s, The—MGM
West Side Story—UA
Wrong Arm of the Law (Br.)—C
CLASS A—Section IV—Morally Unobjectionable for Adults, witb 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.)
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Young and the Willing, The (Br.)—U-I
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
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 (Ital.)—Astor Pictures, Inc.
Lolita—Seven Arts
Long Day’s Journey Into Night—Embassy •
Martin Luther—de Rochemont
Mondo Cane—Times Films
Never Take Candy From a Stranger—Omar
CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for All
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
He Rides Tall—U-I
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Kind of Loving, A (Br.)—Governor
Lady in the Cage—Para.
Landru (Fr.)—Embassy
La Viaccia (Ital.)—Embassy
Leda (Fr.)—Times
Light Fantastic—Embassy
Love on the Riviera—Ultra Films
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.
Of Love and Desire—Fox
Operation Bikini—Am. Inti.
Palm Springs Weekend—War.
Paris Blues—UA
Peeping Tom—Astor
Private Lives of Adam and Eve—U-T
Purple Noon (Fr.)—Times
CLASS C — Condemned
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
Oeo from S to 7 (Fr.)—Zenith
Crowning Experience—MR A
Devil’s Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy
♦Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy
Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films
8Yi (Ital.)—Embassy
Arturo’s Island—(Ital.)—MGM
Back Street—U-I
Candide—(Fr.)—Union Films
Cleopatra—Fox
♦Conjugal Bed, The (Ital.)—Embassy
Cry of Battle—AA
Dementia 13—Am. Inti.
♦Devil and The Ten Commandments-
♦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
Gun Hawk, The—AA
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.
Johnny Cool—UA
Joker, The (Fr.)—Lopert
-Union
Pressure Point—UA
Sky Above and the Mud Below, The (Fr.) —
Embassy
Storm Center—Col.
Strangers in the City—Embassy
Suddenly, Last Summer—Col.
This Sporting Life (Br.)—Continental
Tom Jones (Br.)—UA
Too Young to Love—Arthur-Go Pictures, Inc.
Under the Yum Yum Tree—Col.
Victim (Br.)—Pathe-America
Walk On the Wild Side—Col.
Rampage—War.
♦Shock Corridor—AA
Small World of Sammy Lee, The (Br.)—7 Arts
Sodom and Gomorrah—Fox
Splendor in the Grass—War.
Stripper, The—Fox
Tartars—MGM
That Touch of Mink—U-I
Three Fables of Love (Fr.)—Janus
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.
Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed—Para.
Wild Harvest—Pathe-Am.
Wives And Lovers—Paramount
World by Night—War.
Knife in the Water (Pol
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-Inti.
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-Roval
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
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
,)—Kanawha Films Tiara
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Law, The (Fr.)—Embassy
Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Fr.)—Astor Pic
tures, Inc. w
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
My Life to Live (Fr.)—Union
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
Tahiti (Br.)—Zenith Inti.
Please, Not Now I (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 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 Twine—
K. Gordon Murray Production
Women of the World (Ital.)—Embassy
,*VAlTON 7I7I8UNE PMSS MONROE. GA