Newspaper Page Text
ftlt Twt
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, February 7, 1958
HEBREW SELF-TAUGHT
by AHARON ROSEN
•week
shah-v6o-ah
snatf
• T
.136
begin (m.*.)
maht-lieel
*7"nn?D
• : -
.13 7
before
leef-neh
"33*7
r. t .
.138
when?
mah-taee*
"na
.139
to
el
*7K
.140
; (i o .15) sn-n *3fc?y nrtfa
• vr •/ v r r :
^in Kin rtfann-rra *?k
«nina m2? nytfa dv ‘pa
T * V T T I T
02? nail? Kin .(6.45) mi
T ** * 7
Kin mtooai ,D"*insn "id 1 ?
T j . - . - T: T - : •
nma miam ns ^nno
T r I t •: r v • : -
.(1 0.3 0) ’sm ntoy
• •* T V V
"jk i2?ay smin ,min
r : - v t
*7Ki2? "3K r« I^PV 1 .vit
't^Kitf "IK |ilK HD'K
?nmn na
T T ” “
',. .nan ,m-n i&w nmn
mn jinx oW
* .am rniam *?y jiatfnn
•.. ,)na piK ,rnin ,rnm
bill, account
]ta2?n
.131
hesh'-bohn 2
machine
miaa
.132
m'khoh'-nah 4
t :
mister
ah-dohn
THK
.13 3
half
"Sn
.134
hih'-tsee
pardon
nrr?c
.135
s’lee-hah
T * l
• rntoaa pi 1 ? |iiK .mr^c-
i2?av nania ":k !nn-*?c-
t^kx? nnK no... miam
•• T “ T T : -
naria nK run ,nn*?: -
naria nK .niiara
*73 “nfc?»a rr. ,ri:ia- n
"no pV7 pnK /“« ,a;*n
i tr-r-'»5
,*ntr»a iC? x‘av rtf? r 1 , ~
!n^nnn _ n"aa Kin
1 *73 Tltoon ?K K3
T T : * * V T “i
I jD'ioik -nfeaa .r»arn
• . t I • - - T *
I {nchnrrn'aa pib ihk
Kin ,n"ioiK ncrmn-n'aa
• j v "1 " *• J
?rft P*tn na'K .*nfc?aa
I Tl2?On *7K K3 pi*7 fTTK -
I 1—11 In pzn 2 oh —»» In morn
3 kh appioximutely a* In the Octin.in "Jo<*" or the Scottlih "lorV*
4 ah - between hut and hull 3 h—between h and kh (tee above)
3 th—between pen and puln 6 /uee — rhyme* with high
Reading material m vocalized Easy Hebrew, and also mater •a! for
advanced students may be obtained through your local Hebrew
Organization or by writing to: Bril Ivrit Olamil, P.O.B. 7111,
Jerusalem, Israel.
Legal Notice
APPLICATION FOR ANI)
ORDER ORANTINQ CHARTER
STATE OF OEOROIA:
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR CX3URT
OF 8AII1 COUNTY:
Tilt' petition of JACOH BROCHI and
ALAN BROCHI. whose l’oat Offlre adresa
le #195 Halley Street. 8 W . Atlanta, Ooor
gU. and MRS ROBYN ESTROFF, whose
Post Office address 1* #39 Thackcry Place
Savannah. Oeorgla. hereinafter callod ap
plicants. bring this application for the
granting of a charter for a private corpor
ation, and ahow to the Court the following
facts'. ^
They destro for themselves, their asso
ciates and successors to be Incorporated
for a period of thirty-five (35) years, with
the right of renewal thereof, as provided
by law. under the name and style of
J. A. R. REALTY COMPANY
First Mail From
Captured Fishermen
JERUSALEM, (JTA) — For
the first time since ttie detention
September 25 of six crewmen
aboard the Israeli fishing trawler
Doron, letters from the men have
been received by their relatives.
The letters say only that the men
are well.
The Egyptian authorities con
tinue to resist all representations
by the International Red Cross
Committee to permit one of its
delegates to visit the men.
cash or property.
The principal office and place of business
shall be located In Fulton County. Oeorgla,
with the privilege of establishing branch
offices and places of business In such other
places as may be determined.
The purpose and object fo said corpora-
Uon Is pecuniary gain and profit to Its
stockholders.
The general nature of the business to be
transacted by said corporation Is that of
an Investment company for the purpose of
Investing the capital and surplus of said
corporation in real. Intangible and personal
property of every kind and character and
Including any Interest therein
As an Incident to carrying out said In
vestment business, the said corporation
shall have the right to acquire, purchase,
own. hold. Improve, sell, convey, dispose of.
operate, develop, lease, mortgage and en
cumber. any real, Intangible and personal
property of every kind and nature. Includ
ing stocks and securities of other corpora
tions. and to loan money and take securities
for the payment of all sums due the cor
poration. and to sell, assign and release
such securities.
—4—
a. The maximum number of shares the
said corporation shall be authorised to
Issue shall be two thousand (3.0001 shares
of common stork with a par value of One
Hundred illOO 00) Dollars each, or a frac
tional part thereof, which shares shall have
proportionate fractional voting rights and
the right to receive proportionate fractional
dividends
b The corporation shall have the power,
from time to time, and without amend
ment. upon a majority vote of the out
standing slock, to Increase and decrease
Us capital stock within the maximum or
minimum limits hereinbefore provided In
this application for Charter.
c. The corporation shall have the power
to Include In Its By-Laws any regulatory or
restrictive provisions relating to the pro
posed sale, transfer or disposal of any of
Its outstanding stock by any of Its stock
holders. or In the event of the death of any
of Its stockholders. The manner and form,
as well as the relevant terms, conditions and
details, shall be determined by the majority
vote of the stockholders of this corporation:
provided, however, that no regulatory or
restrictive provision shall affect the rights
of third parties without actual notice there
of. unless such provision shall be written
upon the Certificate evidencing the owner
ship of said stock.
The amount of capital with which the
corporation will begin business shall be
Twentyflve Hundred (S3.500 00) Dollars, to
be paid In. either In property or cash, or
other assets, or a combination of either
The shares of stock of said corporation
may be Issued for any consideration, whe
ther money, property or services, and can
be Issued In exchange for leases. Including
the transfer and assignment thereof, sales
contracts, plants and equipment, and any
other real or personal property or choses
In action useful or necessary In the prose
cution of the business of the corporation.
The valuation of any property or services
for such purposes will be determined by the
Incorporators or directors of the corpora
tion as the case may be, and such method
of valuation shall be conclusive and bind
ing.
—7—
Applicants desire that the said corpora
tion shall have and enjoy all the privileges,
rights and powers enumerated In Chapter
22-18 of the Corporation Act of 1838 of the
Code of Georgia, and as the same may be
hereafter amended, and all of the powers
and privileges enumerated therein are made
a part hereof to the same extent as If the
same were enumerated herein
WHEREFORE, applicants pray that they
be Incorporated under the name and style
aforesaid, with all the rights and privileges
herein set out. and such others as are now
or may hereafter be authorized by law.
and applicants further pray that their ap
plication be granted.
s/Charles W. Bergman
Attorney for Petitioners
1029 First National Bank Building
ORDER
The foregoing application for the forma
tion of a corporation to be known as J. A. R
REALTY COMPANY haring been presented
to the Court, and It appearing that said
application Is within the purview and In
tention of the Statutes of the State of Oeor
gla; and It appearing further that the ap
plicants have conformed with the provisions
of law relating to the granting of charters:
and It further appearing by certificate of
the Secretary of the State that the name of
the proposed corporation Is not the name of
any other existing corporation registered
In the records of said Secretary of State;
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDOED that
the said application Is hereby granted, and
the corporation Is hereby created under the
name of J. A. R REALTY COMPANY, and
said applicants, their associates, successors
and assigns are hereby Incorporated as
prayed in said application, with all the
rights, powers, privileges and Immunities
as prayed In said application and as auth
orised by the Law of this Slate.
This the 10th day of January. 1958.
s/Claude D. Shaw
Judge.
Superior Court of Pulton County
Jan. IT. 34. 31. Feb. 7
PLAIN TALK
God’s in the Lobby
By Alfred Segal
On a Sabbath morning recently,
I was down in the lobby of the
apartment house in which I reside
. . . and there she was sitting, her
whole self deep in a book, it
seemed.
“Good morning,” I said. Maybe
I shouldn’t have interrupted her,
for, as it turned out, she was
speaking just then with God in
the lobby. “And why aren’t you in
schul this morning” I asked.
Almost every Sabbath morning
I had seen her trudging to the
temple service on her walking
stick, steadily, her head proudly
high as if there were no weight
almost of 90 years upon her
shoulders.
“This lobby is schul for me to
day,” she replied. “You see, the
weather is a bit too hot for me in
the sun today; this lobby is my
schul instead and a lovely schul it
is; God’s here, too . . Do you see
what I’m reading?”
She held it up to my eyes . . .
the Union Prayer Book (Reform)
which is in English and in He
brew . . . “I’ve been holding my
own Sabbath service here out of
this book." . . . She smiled • . .
“I’m the rabbi here today, you
might say. I go through the whole
Sabbath service."
She had just been speaking to
God in the adoration part of the
service . . . “May the time not be
distant, O God, when Thy name
shall be worshipped in all the
earth, when unbelief shall disap
pear and error be no more . . .
when corruption and evil shall
give way to purity and goodness,
when superstition shall no longer
enslave the mind • . when all who
dwell on earth shall know that to
Thee alone every knee must bend,
every tongue give homage. May
all created in Thine image recog
nize that they are brethem . . .
Then shall Thy kingdom be
established on earth.”
“I’m sorry,” I said, “to have
interrupted you in the moment
you were speaking these words to
God. Of course, I didn’t know . . .”
“Oh, that’s quite all right with
me, Mr. Segal,” she replied.
“Since we’re all of us the children
of God, He won’t mind you break
ing in while I’m speaking to Him.
That’s the way good fathers are."
She looked around the lobby. . .
“I guess one can make schul al
most anywhere ... in the shop
where one works, in his store, in
the office, on the bus . . .and in
DENVER (JTA)—B’nai B’rith
Hillel Foundations in the Ameri
can universities have halted the
process of assimilation among
Jews in the United States, Rabbi
Harry Kaplan, Hillel director at
the Ohio State University de
clared here.
Speaking at a public meeting,
he contrasted the atmosphere
among Jewish collegians in the
1920’s and the middle 1950’s.
Over 30 years ago, when Hillel
was organized at Illinois Univer
sity to stem the tide of assimila
tion, indifference and ignorance
about Judaism among Jewish stu
dents, first-generation young
American Jews were asking “Why
remain Jews?” Many saw as
similation as the way out for
their problems of adjustment in
the so-called “melting pot.”
Today, second and third gen
eration Jewish college students
talk and think differently. Rabbi
Kaplan asserted. While they may
rush to Hillel activities in num
bers satisfying their elders, never
theless they don’t ask the asimi-
lationist questions pressed by
their parents in another age. To
day’s collegians take their Jew
ishness for granted. They accept
their Hebraic heritage and their
kinship to the Jewish people as
normally as their loyalty to
America. They show an ease
about their religion, and while
this lobby . . . and, particularly,
in one’s own heart. I’m not boast
ing at all; when you get to be my
age it makes no sense for one to
do any bragging anymore; but I
really must say I’ve tried to keep
schul in my heart all my life . . .
every day. My heart may not have
been the holiest all the time
though, but I’ve tried, I’ve tried.
Don’t you, too, Mr. Segal, believe
that the holiest schul is the one
you have in your heart right along
... on week-days as well as on
the Sabbath and the holidays.”
I couldn’t feel too sure of the
right answer to that. Was my own
heart really like a schul all the
time? Was there always peace in
it? Was there love in it all the
time? Only that morning I had
been hating a certain guy out of
my heart; my heart had been
planning what to do to get even
with him.
“Oh,” I replied, “there are times
when my heart isn’t so kosher, you
might say.’
“I know, I know what you
mean," she said then. “But then
is a regular schul always clean . . .
I mean a schul made of stone- The
janitor has to come in every morn
ing to sweep it clean. Then,
there’s all the mess that people
who come to services may leave
behind in a schul out of what’s
in their hearts. You see, in the
schul a lot of minds get away
from speaking to God and then
thoughts come out of them that
don’t belong geither in schul or
anywhere else, for that matter.
That’s what I mean when I speak
of the mess by which some people
leave schul unclean, unkosher, as
you say, Mr. Segal.”
As she spoke our lobby took on
more and more the grandeur of a
sanctuary. Its ceiling seemed to be
lifting toward the stars. The lobby
is lovely enough ordinarily, ex
cept when some of the neighbors
sit around there telling gossip on
other neighbors.
“Guess, you’re right,” I said.
“God is wherever people bring
Him in their hearts. He’s certainly
here now • . .all over the lobby
... on account of you.”
She returned to her conference
with God, saying out of the book,
“We praise Thee, O God, and
thank Thee for all the blessings
of the week that is gone; for life,
health and strength; for home,
love and friendship; for the dis
cipline of our trials and tempta-
much still must be done to over
come ignorance and indifference
even in today’s religious revival,
the potential is there for rich
Jewish affiliation, the Hillel di
rector asserted.
Rabbi Kaplan pointed out that
in the past three decades, the
Hillel Foundation, now providing
Jewish study, discussion, social
life and other activities on 200
U S. campuses, has provided the
stimulus for the development of
many dedicated Jewish profes
sional and lay leaders, including
large numbers of rabbis, welfare
fund and social service executive
directors, officers of B’nai B’rith,
Hadassah, Council of Jewish
Women, Zionist, synagogue, tem
ple and Allied Campaign organ
izations throughout the country.
tions; for the happiness of our suc
cess.”
I was myself in no hurry, had
time to abide with her awhile in
the synagogue she had made of
the lobby . . . just us two in this
big schul. Others who came down
on the elevator were on the run. . .
toward business or the supermark
et or the bargains in the down
town stores.
She kept on speaking to God
out of the book . . .“Thou alone
art God . . .How precious Thy
loving kindness, O God! Thy
mercy has sustained us in hour of
trial . . . Thou hast kept us in life;
may Thy law rule the life of all
Thy children and Thy truth unite
their hearts in fellowship.”
The service in our lobby was
over. . . “But there’s one more
thing for me to say,” she observ
ed. “I never miss reciting the
23rd Psalm. . . ‘The Lord is my
Shepherd; I shall not want . • ,
He restoreth my soul. He guideth
me in straight paths’ . . “And
that’s the whole story," she said.
I myself didn’t go to the regu
lar schul that Sabbath morning.
Wasn’t this schul enough in the
lobby? . . .“Really, I think you’re
a great rabbi,” I told her. “You
gave a great sermon. Thanks!”
I have always known her as
Grand Old Lady by which title I
invariably address her when I
meet her down in the lobby-
PUT YOUR CAR
IN GOOD HANDS!
RALPH CANNON
Automotive Service
251 TECHWOOD
EDGEWOOD DOMESTIC
Colored
Male-Female
Help
JA. 4-7956
16 Butler St., S.E.
WE TOP
'EM ALL
"50th Y«ir o# Business Integrity"
CHAS. N. WALKER
ROOFING CO.
JAckion 1-5747
141 Houston St., N. E , Atlanta Go.
PHONE: MUrray 8-6000
Hillel Foundation Credited with
Checking Assimilations in U. S.