Word: schneider
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With no femme fatale like Garbo, no woman with the animal splendors of the young Ava Gardner, Hollywood has completely lost its come-hither look, falling behind the competition from Europe, where Sophia Loren still unquestionably rules the pantheon. Around her, Bardot and Lollobrigida are fading. But Romy Schneider, Simone Signoret, Claudia Cardinale and Elke Sommer can each outsex all that the American industry has to offer. Hollywood is so barren of sex, in fact, that only last week Universal Pictures had to hold a beauty contest in New York's Americana Hotel in order to find three girls...
...appointment for his bright young aide, but Fermoyle, inconsolable over Mona, gets a two-year leave from the priesthood. Such leave is rarely granted in fact, and even in the movie Fermoyle is still bound by vows of celibacy. While teaching in Vienna, he meets minx-eyed Fraulein Romy Schneider, who pledges herself to woo him away from God. He remains pure-his decencies are legion-but not without a struggle. "I cannot ask you to kiss me while you are still married to the church," Romy purrs, "but in Vienna it is a sin even for a married...
...recent history of the Episcopalians at Harvard parallels that of the Congregationalists and Presbyterians. Like the Congregational Presbyterian Student Fellowship, the Episcopal student organization, the Canterbury Club, has simply withered away from disuse. Now Sunday discussion groups at the home of the Episcopal chaplain, Rev. William J. Schneider, serve as the only for focal point for organization. "A club tends to be restrictive," says Schnider. "It isn't that people couldn't come, but it does appear like a closed thing...
Like Rev. Mumma, Rev. Schneider does not favor organization, for in his view the church has too often been an irrelevant institution which has not addressed itself to the world. "The church is in frightful condition everyplace," he maintains. "What time has been spent, has been wasted to conform to contemporary culture...
...view, undergraduates who happen to be Episcopalians (there are nearly 1,000 at Harvard Radcliffe) should strive for academic excellence, not overly concern themselves with church activities. Schneider feels that the Episcopal church has viewed the university as a breeding ground for secularism for too many years; this merely leads to frustration and causes a cleavage between the church and the community to which it is supposed to minister...