Southern cross. (Savannah, Ga.) 1963-2021, June 25, 1964, Image 6

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PAGE 6—The Southern Cross, June 25, 1964 e Address delivered at Class Night exercises at Aquinas High School, Augusta. “You can change the World.” This is a sobering and a chal lenging thought, as you stand on this threshhold, leaving the pro tective custody and maternal solicitude of your alma mater, Aquinas High School, to enter the dog-eat-dog competitive adult world. The famous Father Keller says you can change the world and we assembled here tonight firmly believe it. The hope of the future is in the hands of the young. Notice we don’t say you can save the world. That would be an unrealistic appraisal of your opportunities and sphere of in fluence, and what is more, an overstatement of the willing ness of others to be changed readily. We do not look upon you as dragon-slaying rescuers appearing on the horizon in shiny new armor dashing about amidst cheers and hosannahs. But most assuredly you can dent the world’s hard crust of paga- nistic, God-forgetting atmos phere, the dollar-chasing, pleasure-mad environs that you will enter as you further your careers. Your good parents, your dedi cated faculty of reverend bro thers and sisters and lay teach ers, your friends and well- wishers, relying on the know ledge that you are steeped in Christian morality as well as Catholic discipline and charac ter formation are all “cock eyed optimists,” expecting con fidently that you will succeed in shaping your surroundings rather than be shaped by them. Even as St. Paul said to the Romans, “Be not overcome by evil, but overcome evil by good.” The world is not in the worst shape possible, nor even ne cessarily in the worst shape in history — contrary to common opinion and popular outcry. But, truthfully, it is in considerably rough shape. By that I mean there are certainly many mat ters that need straightening and stabilizing. You cannot achieve this alone; neither are you being asked to do so. But if you dedicate your selves to the task with the same fervor, enthusiasm and zeal that false religions and false philosophies pour forth, you can make your mark not alone in careers, but more importantly, in fashioning ideals and mold ing your milieu. It would be a collective tra gedy, no less than an individual failure, did you not measure up to your personal responsibility to act upon society, while busily employing your knowledge of other areas to earn a living. Since no man is an island, each and every one of you is your brothers keeper and must as sume your God-given role of making things better for this immediate generation and suc ceeding ones. / But how will you strive for this betterment? Going into the so-called marketplace, the avo cation of your choosing, without sensation, you will simply in sist on truth where falsehood seeks to prevail. You will insist on order where confusion threa tens. You will bring universal Christian love where others spread hatred. You will light a candle where darkness surrounds. And you must unswervingly adhere to the right and the just whenever and wherever misguided ones attempt to seduce the unwary to wrong thinking and unethical practice. All this is expected of you graduates of Aquinas — in the office and factory, in the super market and over the back fence, at cocktail parties and board meetings, in fact wherever groups gather in discussion. For you have been given the spi ritual life of grace to work upon your natural virtues and talents. Your character has been cast and steeled on the forge of Ca tholic education by dedicated workers. Christian warriors before you have been felled by the on slaughts of dishonesty and im morality in business and the professions, and others were mortally wounded or surren dered to the enemies of happy home life, divorce, adultery, birth control. Sadly, tragically, some have given up the practice of the faith, apostasized, aban doned the Catholic religion, be cause the battle became fierce. Assaults will be made on your religion, your code of morality, your very intelligence. It will take a great deal of grit to cleave to the principles instilled through your formative years. But since you have built upon solid rock and not shifting sand, since by practice, goodness is ingrained in you, we fear no failure on your part. You will not be prodigal children, wast ing the advantages received from Catholic education. Your baptismal grace made you a child of God, one member of His family, forming with all others the Mystical Body, a society of whose welfare we grow increasingly conscious and conscientious. The grace of confirmation has sworn you into the divine armed forces, a sol dier’s oath you cannot desert. Penance will always make you well of battle scars. If indeed an army marches on its sto mach, your nourishment is the Eucharist. Fortified thus you will, we confidently expect, be victorious. You will change the world. You parade tonight as it were a formidable battle group of Christ-bearers. At this final inspection of the troops, we bystanders, reminded of cru sader days, salute you for the achievement of having armed yourselves well, and we call upon you with ancient Crusader cry, “In hoc signo vinces”. In this sign (of the cross) you shall triumph. Patriarch Dismisses— (Continued from Page 3) past that his door is open t all people. ‘ ‘Anyone who care to come, Christian or Moslem is a son of Mine,” he said Although his title is Patrb arch of Antioch, his residence Henry J. Brown ^'/''CONTRACTOR f Painting & Decorating Paperhanging 114 W. 51St. 233-1370 Savannah * 0 - termites year r ound ^eflRON WORK • PORCH COLUMNS & RAILS yrt •ATEEL STAIRS ^ MISC. IRON WORK • DCHT STRUCTURAL STGEL 3i Year, Experience ALBERT CLARK - Owner Clark and Sons IRON WORKS 5518 WHITE BLUFF RD. SAVANNAH EL 5-1340 is located on the foothills of Mount Lebanon, overlooking Beirut. From here he presides over the 782,447 Maronite Ca tholics in the world, including 125,000 in the United States. Bom in Lebanon in 1894, he was educated in Rome and in 1920 went to the United States. For the next 14 years he serv ed in Maronite parishes in Mi chigan City, Ind., New Bedford, Mass., and Los Angeles. Al though by then a naturalized American, he was named in 1934 to be Archbishop of Tyre in Lebanon. In 1955, when the patriarchate fell vacant, the Holy See waived the traditional right of the Maronite synod to elect its own patriarch and ap pointed Archbishop Meouchi to the post. Patriarch Meouchi’s good standing among Arabs is typi fied by his friendship with King Hussein of neighboring Jordan. He now uses a 1964 autombile that was a gift from the Jordan ian monarch. It is the same car that Pope Paul VI used during his visit to the Holy Land last January. The patriarch’s only regret is that the Pope did not have an opportunity to stop at Lebanon. For a time it appeared bad weather might force the Pon tiffs plane to land at Beirut instead of Amman, Jordan, the official destination. Church and government officials rushed to the airport, but the weather in Amman lifted and the Pope con tinued on. VISITATION COMMEMORATED HERE—Rites commem orating the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary to her cousin, Elizabeth, after the Annunciation (Luke 1:39-47) will be held on the feastday, July 2, in church of the Vis itation in the village of Ain Karim, five miles southwest of Jerusalem. Built upon a hillside, over the remains of early churches on the site, it was completed in 1955— (N.C. Photos). Visitation To Be Commemorated By Brother Louis Sweeney, O.F.M. (N.C.W.C. News Service) JERUSALEM, Israel —Rites commemorating the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin to her cousin Elizabeth will be ob served on the feastday, July 2, at the small village known as Ain Karim, five miles southwest of here. Even today, the winding road that the pilgrim travels vividly recalls the Gospel’s references to “hill country,” that sur rounds the valley which is the birthplace of St. John the Bap tist. The Church of the Visitation is situated on one of the hill sides. It is still a small “labor of love” to get there for it must be done on foot. The climb has its rewards, however, for the scenic view of the terraced olive and fruit trees in captivating. Across the small valley can be seen the Confent of the Sis ters of Sion and its spacious grounds. The founder of this sisterhood, Father Maria Al phonse Ratisbonne, is buried in the convent cemetery. Passing through the ornate grill one enters a courtyard and immediately his attention is drawn to a mosaic in the exter ior wall of the Church. It shows Our Lady seated upon a donkey and being conducted on her jour ney by angels, and is one of the most beautiful mosaics in the Holy Land. To the right a boun dary wall contains some 40 pla ques on which are written the Magnificat in different lan guages. At its base a flower bed serves as a constant reverence by mankind of Mary’s words. Almost all pilgrims take the opportunity to quench their thirst at a spring which is fed by a small mountain stream. The church is built upon and includes the remains of earlier churches. It was completed as recently as 1955. The joyful spirit of the Visitation is repre sented in the decorations, es pecially the large frescoes de picting Mary under various ti tles. Attendance at the ceremonies commemorating the feast is generally limited to priests, Sisters and school children who come from Jerusalem because the 300 or so Christians once living in the area left during the Holy Land war of 1948. Following the Solemn Mass, sung by the Franciscans, a pro cession winds its way through Rights Bill— (Continued from Page 1) be cut off by Federal agency. Programs include school lunch es, welfare and hospital con struction. —Federal agencies: Civil Rights Commission extended until 1968, new Community Re lations Service set up in Com merce Department to help loca lities deal with racial problems and Census Bureau directed to meet requests of rights com mission for statistics on regis tration and voting in areas selected by commission. —Jury trials: Guarantees jury trials on criminal con tempt of court charges under any part of act but that dealing with voting. —Court procedure: Federal district court decisions refus ing to permit civil rights cases to be moved from state courts to Federal courts could be ap pealed. the garden singing the Magnifi cat, the Litany and other Mar ian hymns. Solemn benediction in the afternoon is the closing ceremony. God’s World- (Continued from Page 4) ian word which means, ‘ ‘Collec tion,” and this book is a col lection of all the prayers and devotions which have been in- dulgenced by the church. Pray ers, aspirations and devotions in honor of the Sacred Heart fill some thirty pages of the: book. Even aside from devotion to the Sacred Heart, the Rac- colta might well be the private prayerbook of every Catholic. It is a book of some 600 pages, about the size of a daily mis sal, and is procurable at any Catholic bookstore. It has a wealth of prayers to lend var iety to our devotional life: pray ers to the Blessed Trinity, prayers to our Lord Jesus under His numerous titles (Sacred Heart, Blessed Sacrament, Precious Blood, Holy Infant, etc.) prayers in honor of our Blessed Mother and of individ ual saints, prayers for the Suf fering Souls, special prayers for each state in life and for almost all of life’s important occasions. While a certain amount of variety in our prayers is un doubtedly helpful this does not mean that a multiplicity of pri vate devotions is to be recom mended. We must not let our selves become involved in so many particular devotions that God Himself gets lost in the un derbrush. We must be careful, too, not to let devotion degenerate into superstition. This is a possibil ity to be considered any time that we find ourselves becom ing compulsive about certain personal prayers or devotions. If we feel vaguely uncomfortable about having missed this or that prayer in honor of some spe cific saint or mystery of our Lord, as though something un pleasant might happen as a re sult of the omission—then it is time to examine ourselves as to the purity of our spirit of pray er. The basic motive of all our prayers must be our love for God. We honor Mary because His Mother is so precious to God and because He has shared her with us, giving us His Moth er as our Mother, too. We honor the saints because they are God’s everlasting friends, mas terpieces of His creative grace. Any devotion which does not have God as its ultimate objec tive is a perverted devotion. The liturgical prayer of the Church, especially the Mass, must always have the first and central place in our spiritual lives. Beyond, this, our free dom in prayer is complete. In private devotions, as in other facets of life, tastes do differ, and God is willing to let us range widely. For our own in terior growth, however, the less cluttered we keep our prayer life, the better. Whatever may be our person al preferences in prayer, devo tion to the Sacred Heart of Je sus certainly should be at the top of the list. It could not be otherwise, since Jesus has pleaded with such urgency for this love-for-love exchange be tween Him and ourselves. Jottings (Continued From Page 4) president like that: bright, brave and funny, and goodlook ing?” Well, that classic is there and so is the script from the famous British television pro gram, “That Was the Week That Was.” As is Mary McGrory’s Washington Star column: “Of John Fitzgerald Kennedy’s fun eral it can be said he would have liked it.” But can anyone write like the Irish when they are sad? Frank O’Connor, Des mond Mullan, Gerry Murphy are bound to bring tears from the hardest. # * * The second book of the many published which I felt I must own is entitled: “A Memory of John F. Kennedy,” $3., and is a slight volume with technicolor pictures and records of speech es made on his visit to Ireland June 26 to 29, 1963. Last week on a television program Senator Ted Kennedy told the audience that he felt his brother’s happi est days on earth were those spent in Ireland. As Sean Quin lan wrote “I think of the hearts he warmed in my Irish home land last June. For heart spoke to heart when he came to us to end the great hunger and to re deem us not a little from our brooding of the past. We believe that we gave him something, too, some rich awareness that he shared with his Jacqueline who summoned the jackets green across the 'bowl of bitter tears’ from the plains by the Liffey to a shield’s length of earth at Arlington.” The Irish book was published by the Wood Printing Works, Wolfe Tone Street, Dub lin. The pictures recording the sentimental journey of a year ago are beautiful productions and there are all the texts of his speeches which endeared him in a land where speech is pure poetry. These two books I treasure and carefully select ed from all the plethora of Ken nedy books on the market. Each has his reason for selecting particular books on the fallen warrior. Mine were chosen be cause one was a press tribute and the other an Irish tribute. The writing found in these two volumes alone is worth study. I could not read either without weeping. It is the last presentation in the press tribute book which caused the most reflection as we begin to find out more and more about this man who was with us so brief a time. It is written by Robert Kennedy and says: “President Kennedy would have been 47 in May. At least one half of the days that he spent on earth were days of intense physical pain. . .But during all this time, I never heard him complain. I never heard him say anything which would indicate that God had dealt with him unjustly.” Among Kennedy’s last words a year ago in Ireland were: “This is not the land of my birth but it is the land for which I hold the greatest affection, and I cer tainly will be back in the spring time.” And speaking of the books and articles which con tinue to come off the presses on Kennedy, in the June issue of “Esquire,” Tom Wicken, ‘Times’ newsman, wrote an ar ticle entitled “Kennedy without Tears.” In it is this paragraph: “Kennedy sometimes dis cussed the possibility that he would be assassinated with members of his staff. They would be anxious to explain the details of security precau- Latest Legion Listings CLASS A SECTION I Circus World Patsy, The Magic Fountain, The Golden Arrow, The Robinson Crusoe on Mars Flipper’s New Adventure McHale’s Navy Master Spy CLASS A, SECTION II Escape by Night Train 349 From Berlin Good Neighbor Sam Man From Rio Ring of Treason Walk Into Hell Evil Eye Horror Of It All, The Secret Invasion 633 Squadron CLASS A SECTION III Mafioso Nightmare in the Sun Panic Button CLASS A SECTION IV Gool World, The Night of The Iguana CLASS B Craze Desire Black Sabbath Honeymoon Hotel Long Ships, The Under Age The New Interns Shot in the Dark CLASS C Christine Keeler Affair, The Image of Love Weekend Pius XII (Continued from Page 1) “With regard to his Christ mas message,” Tittmann told . his superiors in Washington, “the Pope gave me the impres sion that he was sincere in be lieving that he had spoken there in clearly enough to satisfy all those who had been insisting in the past that he utter some word of condemnation of the nazi at rocities and he seemed surpris ed when I told him that I thought there were some who did not share his belief. “He said he thought that is was plain to everyone that he was referring to the Poles, Jews and hostages when he de clared that hundreds of thous ands of persons had been kill ed or tortured through no fault of their own, sometimes only because of their race or nation ality. * ‘He explained that when talk ing of atrocities he could not name the nazis without at the same time mentioning the bol sheviks and this he thought tions to him, to show him that it was unlikely it would happen. ‘If someone is going to kill me,’ he would say, 'they’re going to kill me.’ And one of those who was close to him believed that Kennedy bothered little about what he was going to do with all those years that pre sumably would be on his hands when he emerged from the White House at age fifty-one (assum ing he won two terms). “ 'It didn't really concern him,’ the aide recalls. ‘Henev er thought he was going to live to be an old man anyway.’ ” might not be wholly pleasing to the Allies. “He stated that he ‘feared’ that there was foundation for the atrocity reports of the Al lies but led me to believe that he felt that there had been some exaggeration for purposes of propaganda. Taken as a whole he thought his message should be welcomed by the American people and I agreed with (him).” Tittmann also reported that he told the Pope how much he appreciated being able to attend the Midnight Mass the Pontiff had celebrated for members of the diplomatic corps on Christmas Eve. “I said I was impressed by this demonstra tion above the havoc of war of the brotherhood of man when friend and foe alike were seen to kneel together at the altar in order to receive Holy Com munion from the hands of the Universal Father,” Tittmann telegraphed. ‘ ‘The Germans however, were conspicuous by their ab sence and I could see that their lack of cooperation in this in stance had affected the Holy Father. He was inclined to at tribute the absence to fear on their part that they might in cur displeasure of the more extreme nazi leaders had they attended.” The release of this latest in formation recalls a communi cation from Tittmann dated Oct. 6, 1942, in which he said “an other motive, possibly the con trolling one, behind the Pope’s disinclination to denounce nazi atrocities is his fear that if he does so now, the German people, in the bitterness of their de feat, will reproach him lat er on,” for having contributed to the condition of German de feat. Tittmann said Germans had made similar accusations against Pope Benedict XV for his World War I statements. “When it is borne in mind that Pius XII had many years of conditioning in Germany, it will not seem unnatural that he should be particularly sensitive to this particular argument,” Tittmann added, obviously ref erring to the long service, Pius XII had in Germany as a diplo mat of the Holy See. TEL AVIV, Israel (NC)—The Israeli premiere of the contro versial play “The Deputy” by Rolf Hochhuth was given here (June 18) at the Habimah thea tre. President Shneor Shazar of Israel, Prime Minister Levi Eshkol and the Foreign Minis ter Golda Meir were among those who declined to attend , the first night performance. Several members of the cab inet were present. All the newspapers here praised the performance, and at the same time gave nega tive accounts of Pope Pius XII. A major thesis of “The Deputy” is that Pope Pius shar ed guil in the nazi slaughter of the Jews by not denouncing the nazi genocide program publicly and specifically. LEGION OF DECENCY CLASS A — Section I — Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage REVIEWED THIS ISSUE Dimka (Russ.)—Artkino Never Put it in Writing—AA Ready for the People—War. PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED Alakazam, The Great—Am. Inti. Invasion Quartet—MGM Snake Woman—UA Angel in a Taxi—Magna Films t Island of the Blue Dolphins—U-I Son of Captain Blood—Para. Assignment Outer Space—Am. Inti. It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World—UA Summer Holiday—Am. Inti. Swingin’ Maiden, The (Br.)—Col. Boy Who Caught a Crook (Was: Boy Who Lassie’s Great Adventure—Fox Found $100,000)—UA Law of the Lawless—Para. t Sword in the Stone—BV Brass Bottle—U-I McLintock—UA Tarzan’s Three Challenges—MGM Captain Sindbad—MGM MGM’s Big Parade of Comedy—MGM Teenage Millionaire—UA Capture That Capsule—UA Misadventures of Merlin Jones, The—BV Thief of Baghdad—MGM Cavalry Command (Phil.)—Pan-World Films Mouse on the Moon—UA Three Stooges Go Around the World in a Crimson Blade (Br.)—Col. Murder at the Gallop (Br.)—MGM Daze, The—Columbia Dentist in the Chair, A (Br.)—Ajay Film Co. My Son, the Hero—UA t Thomasina—Buena Vista Dream Maker, The (Br.)—U-I Mysterious Island—Col. Ticklish Affair, A—MGM Fall of the Roman Empire—Para. Nikki, Wild Dog of the North—Buena Vista Tiger Walks, A—BV FB I. Code 98—War. One Man’s Way—UA Traitors—U-I First Spaceship to Venus—Pan-World Films Pied Piper of Hamelin—Prod. Unlimited Valley of the Dragons—Col. Flight That Disappeared—UA Pirates of Tortuga—Fox Varan—The Unbelievable—Pan-World Films Francis of Assisi—Fox Purple Hills—Fox Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea—Fox Gidget Goes to Rome—Col. Queen of the Pirates—Col. When the Clock Strikes—UA Gladiators Seven—MGM Raiders, The (Br.)—U-I ♦ Who’s Minding the Store—Para. Goliath and the Sins of Babylon—Am Inti. Raiders of Leyte Gulf—Hemisphere Pictures Wild and the Wonderful—U-I Hercules and the Captive Women (Ital.) — Rhino—MGM Yank in Viet Nam, A—AA Pan-World Samson and the Slave Queen—Am. Inti. You Have to Run Fast—UA Honeymoon Machine—MGM Sergeant Was a Lady—U-I Young and the Brave, The—MGM t Incredible Journey—Buena Vista Incredible Mr. Limpert, The—War. Seven Faces of Dr. Lao—MGM Siege of the Saxons (Br.)—Col. Young Swingers, The—Fox CLASS A — Section II — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents REVIEWED THIS ISSUE Bandits of Orgosolo (Ital.)—Pathe Unsinkable Molly Brown—MGM Goliath and the Island of Vampires—Am. Inti. Voice of the Hurricane- PREVI0USLY REVIEWED —Selective Pics. Act One—War. Family Diary (Ital.)—MGM Pit and the Pendulum—Am. Inti. Advance to the Rear (was: Company of Fiances, The (Ital.)—Janus Point of Order—E. Silverman Cowards) —MGM Frantic (Fr.)—Times Film Corp. Quick Gun—Columbia All the Way Home—Para. Fury of Smuggler’s Bay (Br.)—Embassy Robin and the Seven Hoods—War. Amazons of Rome (was: Virgins of Rome) Gone Are the Days—Hammer Bros. Sanjuro (Jap.)—Toho Inti. (Ital.)—UA Guns of Darkness—War. Sardonicus—Col. And Suddenly It’s Murder (Ital.)— Harbor Lights—Fox Scream of Fear—Col. Davis-Royal Haunted Palace, The—Am. Inti. Secret Door, The—AA Any Number Can Win (Fr.)—MGM Haunting, The (Br.)—MGM Secret of Deep Harbor—UA Atlantis, the Lost Continent—MGM Hide and Seek (Br.)—U-I Seven Days in May—Paramount Billy Budd—AA Hootenanny Hoot—MGM Shock Treatment—Fox Black Fox—Capri Films Householder, The—Col. Sound of Trumpets (Ital.)—Janus Bridge to the Sun—MGM Just For Fun—Col. Square of Violence—MGM Bullet for a Badman—U-I Kings of the Sun—UA Stolen Hours—UA Burning Court, The (Fr.)—Trans-Lux Kiss of the Vampire—U-I Surf Party—Fox Captain Newman, M.D.—U-I Cat Burglar—UA Ladies Who Do (Br.)—Walter Reade-Sterling Suitor, The (Fr.)—Atlantic Ladybug, Ladybug—UA Stagecoach to Thunder Rock—Para. Swingin’ Affair—Pan-World Films Chalk Garden—U-I ♦ Lancelot and Guinevere—U-I Charade—U-I Lawrence of Arabia—Col. Terror, The—Am. Inti. Children of the Damned—MGM Life in Danger—AA Thrill of It All—U-I Chushingura (Jap.)—Toho Inti. Lord of the Flies—Walter Reade-Sterling Thunder Island—Fox Convicts 4 (was: Reprieve)—A A Man From Galveston, The—War. Trunk, The—Col. Cow and I, The (Fr.)—Zenith Inti. Dark Purpose—U-I juo Mary, Mary—War. Twenty Plus Two—AA Miracle Worker—UA Two Nights With Cleopatra—Ultra Films Day and the Hour, The—MGM Muscle Beach Party—Am. Inti. Walk A Tight Rope—Para. Devil at 4 O’clock—Col. (Ind.) Mutiny On the Bounty—MGM War is Hell—AA Devil Ship Pirates, The—Col. My Name Is Ivan (Russian)—Sig Shore Weekend With Lulu—Col. ♦Distant Trumpet—War. Naked Edge—UA Wheeler Dealers—MGM Dr. Blood’s Coffin—UA Nightmare—U-I World of Henry Orient, The—UA Ensign Pulver—War. No My Darling Daughter—Zenith X—The Man With the X-Ray Eyes—Am. Inti. Evil of Frankenstein—U-I Old Dark House, The—Col. Young Doctors—UA CLASS A— Section III — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults REVIEWED THIS ISSUE Don’t Tempt the Devil (Fr.)—Doll St Co. Thin Red Line—AA PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED Ada—MGM Gunfight at Comanche Creek—AA Pyro—Am. Inti. America, America—War. Heavens Above (Br.)—Janus Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)—Astor Angels of Darkness—Thalia Films Hellfire Club—Embassy Running Man, The—Col. Armored Command—AA Hustler, The—Fox Season of Passion—UA Beach Party—Am. Inti. In the French Style—Col. Summer and Smoke—Para. ♦t Becket—Para. Killers, The—U-I Susan Slade—War. Bedtime Story—U-I Kisses For My President—War. Strait-Jacket—Col. Billy Liar (Br.)—Walter Reade-Sterling Leopard, The—Fox Take Her, She’s Mine—Fox Breakfast At Tiffany’s—Para. Love With the Proper Stranger—Para. ♦ Tamahine—MGM Cardinal, The—Col. Mail-Order Bride—MGM Third Secret, The—Fox ♦ Ceremony, The—UA Man Who Couldn’t Walk—Apex Films Three On a Spree—UA Claudelle Inglish—War. Maniac—Col. Thunder of Drums—MGM Come September—U-I Man’s Favorite Sport—U-I Torpedo Bay—Am. Inti. Condemned of Altona—Fox Money, Money, Money (Fr.)—Times Film ♦ To Bed or Not to Bed (Ital.)— Couch, The—War. Corp. Walter Reade-Sterling Dead Ringer—War. ♦ Move Over Darling—Fox Town Without Pity—UA Dr. Crippen (Br.)—War. Muriel (Fr.)—UA Twilight of Honor—MGM Eyes of Annie Jones, The—Fox Naked Kiss—AA Two Are Guiity—MGM Flight From Ashiya—UA One Plus One—Selected Pics. Two Women (Ital.)—Embassy For Those Who Think Young—UA Panic in Year Zero—Am. Inti. Victors, The—Col. Fun in Acapulco—Para. ♦ Paris When It Sizzles—Para. V.I.P.’s, The—MGM Global Affair—MGM Pink Panther—UA West Side Story—-UA Great War, The—Lopert Guest, The—Janus Prize, The—MGM Youngblood Hawke—War. Zulu (Br.)—Embassy 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.) REVIEWED THIS ISSUE Black Like Me—Walter Reade-Sterling PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED Adam and Eve (Mex.)—Wm. Horne Freud—U-I Servant, The—Landau Co. Advise and Consent—Col. Girl of the Night—War. Sky Above and the Mud Below, The (Fr.)— Anatomy of a Murder—Col. Important Man (Mexican)—Lopert Embassy Best Man, The—UA Intruder—Pathe-Am. Storm Center—Col. Case of Dr. Laurent (Fr.)—Trans-Lux King of Kings—MGM Strangers in the City—Embassy Circle of Deception—Fox L-Shaped Room, The Columbia—Davis-Royal Suddenly, Last Summer—Col. Cleo from 5 to 7 (Fr.)—Zenith La Dolce Vita (Ital.)—Astor Pictures, Inc. This Sporting Life (Br.)—Continental Crowning Experience—MRA Lolita—Seven Arts Tom Jones (Br.)—UA Devil’s Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy Long Day’s Journey Into Night—Embassy Too Young to Love—Arthur-Go Pictures, Inc. * Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy Martin Luther—de Rochemont Under the Yum Yum Tree—Col. Dr. Strangelove—Col. Mondo Cane—Times Films Victim (Br.)—Pathe-America Easy Life, The (Ital.)—Embassy Never Take Candy From a Stranger—Omar Walk On the Wild Side—Col. Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films i'/i (Ital.)—Embassy Pressure Point—UA Young and the Willing, The (Br.)—U-I CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for All REVIEWED THIS ISSUE ♦What A Way to Go—Fox PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED ♦Carpetbaggers, The—Para. Horror of Party Beach—Iselin-Tenney Prods. Small World of Sammy Lee, The (Br.)—7 Arts Cleopatra—Fox Irma La Douce—UA Soldier in the Rain—A A Comedy of Terrors—Am. Inti. Johnny Cool—UA Kissin’ Cousins—MGM ♦ Station Six Sahara—AA * Conjugal Bed, The (Ital.)—Embassy Strangler, The—AA Cry of Battle—AA Lady in the Cage—Para. ♦ Sunday In New York—MGM Curse of the Living Corpse—Iselin-Tenney Looking For Love—MGM Three Fables of Love (Fr.)—Janus Prods. Love on the Riviera—Ultra Films Temptress and the Monk (Jap.)—Hakim Pro- Dementia 13—Am. Inti. Man in the Middle—Fox ductions * Devil and The Ten Commandments—Union Night Must Fall—MGM Tiara Tahiti (Br.)—Zenith Inti For Love or Money—U-I Of Human Bondage—MGM Viva Las Vegas—MGM ♦ Four For Texas—War. Of Love and Desire—Fox Wall of Noise—War. ♦From Russia With Love—UA Palm Springs Weekend—War. Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed—Para. Girl Hunters, The—Colorama Features Psyche 59—Col. Wives And Lovers—Para. Gun Hawk, The—AA Rampage—War. ♦Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (Ital)— He Rides Tall—U-I ♦ Shock Corridor—AA CLASS C — Condemned REVIEWED THIS ISSUE Molesters, The—Aristocrat Films PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED Embassy Affair of the Skin, An—Zenith La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert Lady Chatterley’s Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley Phaedra (Greek)—Lopert And God Created Woman (Fr.)—Kingsley Playgirl After Dark (Br.)—Topaz Films Baby Doll—War. Law, The (Fr.)—Embassy Please, Not Now! (Fr.)—Inti. Classics Balcony, The—Continental Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Fr.)—Astor Pic- Port of Desire—Union Bed of Grass (Greek)—Trans-Lux tures, Inc. Pot Bouille (Lovers of Paris) (Fr.)—Con- Bell’Antonio (Ital.)—Embassy Films Liane, Jungle Goddess—DCA tinental Boccaccio 70 (Ital.)—Embassy Love Game (Fr.)—Films Around World Prime Time—Essanjay Films, Inc. Bonne Soupe, La (Fr.)—International Classics Love Is My Profession (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl. Private Property—Citation Breathless (Fr.)—Films Around World Love on a Pillow (Fr.)—Davis-Royal Question of Adultery—NTA Cold Wind In August—Aidart Lovers, The (Fr.)—Zenith Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (Br.)— Come Dance With Me (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl. Mademoiselle Striptease (Fr.)—DCA Continental Doll, The (Swed.)—Kanawha Films Magdalena (Ger.)—Buhawk Savage Eye—Trans-Lux-Kingsley Inti. During One Night (Br.)—Astor Maid in Paris (Fr.)—Bellon-Foulke Seven Capital Sins (Fr.)—Embassy Empty Canvas—Embassy Mating Urge—Citation Miller’s Beautiful Wife (Ital.)—DCA Silence, The (Swed.)—Janus Expresso Bongo (Br.)—Continental Sins of Mona Kent—Astor Five Day Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl. Mistress for the Summer, A (Fr.)—American Smiles of a Summer Night (Swedish)—Rank Girl With the Golden Eyes (Fr.)—Union Films Film Distributors Tales of Paris (Fr.)—Times Films Green Carnation (was: Trials of Oscar Wilde) Mitsou (Fr.)—Zenith Inti. Temptation (Fr.-Ital.)—Shelton (Br.)—Warwick Films Mom and Dad (Sideroad)—Hallmark Prod. Third Sex (Ger.)—D. & F. Dist. Green Mare (Fr.)—Zenith Moon Is Blue, The—UA Too Young, Too Immoral—Rialto Inti. Heroes and Sinners (Fr.)—Janus My Life to Live (Fr.)—Union Trials of Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Warwick Films I Am a Camera—DCA Never On Sunday (Greek)—Lopert Truth, The (La Verite) (Fr.)—Kingsley Inti. I Love, You Love (Ital.)—Davis-Royal Nude udyssey, the (Ital.)—Davis-Royal Viridiana (Sp.)—Kingsley Inti. Joan of the Angels?—Polish-Telepix Odd Obsession (Jap.)—Harrison War of the Buttons (Fr.)—Sami. Bronston Jules and Jim (Fr.)—Janus Of Wayward Love (Ital.)—Pathe Wasted Lives and The Birth of Twins— Knife in the .Water (Pol.)—Kanawha Films Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Four City Enterprises K. Gordon Murray Production L’Avventura (Ital.)—Janus Passionate Summer (Fr.-Ital.)—Kingsley Women of the World (Ital.)—Embassy Hochhuth Play Given In Tel Aviv