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P«(e Twt
THB SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, Nov. 29, 1963
Off The Record
By NATHAN ZIPRIN
About Snobs
Anthropologist* pondering so
cial differences between America
and Europe might well be ad
vised that there is such a pattern
as the American way of life in
anti-Jewishness which is quite
different from that prevailing in
Europe.
Anti-Semitism in Europe is a
blood-soaked, pogrom-orien ted
spasm of hate. In the United
States, except for the lunatic
fringe, it is best described as a
desire to have as little as possible
to do with Jews.
A classic example of the Amer
ican way of prejudiced life has
come to light in Bronxville, a
square mile of choice real estate
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND ORDER
GRANTING CHARTER
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR
Or SAID COUNTY.
The PeUtlon of ALVIN N. SIEGEL,
whoM poet office addreu le 1120 El
doredo Dr., N. E., Atlanta, Georgia,
arv WLBR, whose poet office addreee le
lMft, Alderbrook Road. N. E Atlanta,
MMl and JOYE RIVERS, whoae
peat office addreas la 4725 Eaet Con
way Rued. N. W, Atlanta, Georgia,
reepectirely shows:
• I.
Thai they dealre for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns,
to be Incorporated under the name and
ENTERPRISES, INC.
fas fh4 term of thirty-five (25) year*.
♦ . 2.
The principal office of said business
Shall be located In Fulton County,
Georgia, with the right and privilege
of establishing branch offices and
places of business elsewhere, both
within and without the State of Geor
gia.
3.
The object of said Corporation la
pecuniary gain to Itself and Its stock
holders.
4.
The general nature of the business
to be transacted, and the corporate
power* desired are:
(a) To Invast Its funds In property
of all kinds, both real and personal,
(t>>) To acquire. Improve, manage,
work, mortgage, encumber, sell, ex
change, dispose of, turn to account
and otherwise deaf In all classes of
real and personal property of every
nature whatsoever.
(c) To acquire and pay for In cash,
stocks or bonds of this corporation or
otherwise real and personal property,
the goodwill, rights, assets and profits,,
and to undertake or assume. In whole
Or any part thereof, the obligations or
liabilities of any person, firm, associa
tion or corporation.
(d) To Issue bonds, mortgage, deeds
to secure debts, or other Indentures
for the purpose of securing any ob
ligation of laid corporation.
5.
The Capital Stock of said corpora
tion shall be One Hundred Thousand
Dottais ($100,000) divided Into One Hun
dred Thousand (100,000) shares of the
par value of One Dollar ($1.00) each,
all of which shall be common stock.
8
The amount of capital with which
this corporation shall begin business
la sot leas than $200.00, and all the
capital shall be paid Into the corpora
tion In money, property or a comblna
tlon of the two.
7.
Said corporation shall be authorised
to Issue stock for any consideration,
either money, property or services,
which Is at least equivalent to the full
par value of the stock so to be Issued.
The valuation of any property or serv
ice for such purpose will be fixed by
the directors of the Corporation and
such method of valuation will be con
clusive.
S.
The Corporation shall have the pow
er to amend, alter, change or repeal
any provision of Its Charter In form
or substance upon the vote of two-
thirds of Its outstanding Common
Stock, and all rights conferred upon
stockholders, directors and officers
herein and grsnted subject to this
reservation.
Applicants desire that the said Corp
oration shall have and enjoy all the
privileges, rights and powers enum
erated In Chapter 22-18 of the corpora
tion Act of 1928 of the Code of Geor
gia, and at the same may be hereafter
amended, and all of the powers and
privileges enumerated therein all made
a part hereof to the same extent as
If the same were enumerated herein.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray an
order to be granted Incorporating
them, their associates, successors and
assigns, under the name aforesaid, with
the powers and privileges as may be
necessary, proper or Incident to the
conduct of the business for which pe
titioners are seeking Incorporation, and
as may be allowed for private corpor
ations under the terms of the Act of
January 28, 1928. authorizing the char
tering of corporations.
SIEGEL. LEWIS A WILLIAMS
Bv: AI.VTN N. SIEGEL
Attomev for Petitioners
GEORGIA. FULTON COUNTY
ORDER
The within and foregoing application
for charter of Alvin N. Siegel, et al
haring been examined bv me; and
IT APPEARING, That the applica
tion Is legitimately within the purview
W the laws of the State of Georgia;
**nr APPEARING, From the certificate
of tba Secretary of State that tha
aasaa of the proposed corporation Is
■0$ tha name or any now existing
•graoratlon registered in the records
ef at State of Georgia.
IT n HEREBY ORDERED, That said
between two lusty New York
communities — The Bronx anti
Yonkers.
Life in Bronxville has been el
egant and well-mannered, as it
was planned by its founder 75
years ago. It is one of the wealth
iest communities in the United
States, with an average annual
family income of nearly $18,000
It is a community of handsome
homes and smart shops.
It is, in fact, a very nice place
to live, if one can afford it. No
doubt some Jews and possibly
even a few Negroes could afford
it. However, as far as it can be
determined, there is not a single
Jewish or Negro resident in the
whole area.
It strains credulity to the
breaking point to believe thin
purity of Anglo-Saxon, Protestant
residence is strictly happenstance
Still, Bronxville residents are
quick to reject any suggestion of
prejudice. Prejudice nowadays is
uncouth. Ask a Bronxvillite and
he will promptly say: “We have
nothing against anyone. It’s just
that we don’t want to have the
community spoiled by the nouv-
eaux riches—or anything." The
standard explanation of the
Bronxville realtors is along the
same lines: “Jews just haven’t
cared to come here and Negroes
haven’t been able to afford to.”
Lately other views have de
veloped in plumply-cushioned,
self-isolated Bronxville. Consider
that of Mrs. William L. Colt,
widow of an industrialist execu
tive and a resident of Bronxville
for 50 years. She says: “The at
titudes of this community are dis
graceful. Bronxville is interna
tionally infamous for discrimina
tion.”
That is why she took the lead
in bringing together 185 Bronx
ville residents to form a Com
mittee on Human Rights to seek
to change those attitudes.
The committee faces a long
uphill struggle and the nature of
the problem again points up the
differences in the expressions of
prejudice between the Old and
the New World. The happy, well-
adjusted comfortable denizens of
Bronxville really cannot be hon
estly said to hate Jews or the
Jews. It is quite likely in fact
that most Bronxville residents
have little or no acquaintance
with Jews.
The core of these attitudes
more likely resides in a determ
ination to be left alone by the
swirling tides of social change of
our age. There has been some
turnover in the Bronxville pop
ulation but it has not been in
the nature of “the class who could
get along with each other.”
The Anglo-Saxons of Bronx
ville do not hate Jews or Negroes.
They are clearly too well-man
nered and civilized for sucti re
grettable lapses. They simply hate
change. As one of them put it:
“We like things as they are in
Bronxville; why should anyone
try to change them?”
Insularity and a pleasant con
viction that one should live with
people of similar views and back
grounds exolain much more about
the lack of Jews and Negroes in
Bronxville than any efforts to
find proof of true racist hatred.
The proper diagnosis would
seem to be snobbishness rather
than racism.
And that too is a commentary
on the uninue differences between
the New World and the Old.
application la herebv granted and aald
corporation la hereby created under
the name of
"CAPRE’ ENTERPRISES. INC.”
With tha powers therein aoueht and
the privileges and Immunities provided
hv law; corporatlona of almllar m-
tu*--
Thia the 1J day of November. 1963.
GEORGE P. WHITMAN SR
Judee, Superior Court,
Atlanta Circuit
STATE Or GEOROT\
COUNTY OF FTTTON
Personally appeared before the un
dersigned agent. Slbvl C. Pearson, who
savs nnd»r oath. e« tha aeant of THE
SOT CITTERN ISRAET-ITE. a nawspaper
having a general circulation, and
whose principal place of business la In
said countv, that there has been de
posit ad with said nawsoarvr the coat
of publishing four (4) Insertions of the
fore^otna anr»T»cat«on fof charter of
CAPRE* ENTERPRISES. INC. and order
of the Judge thereon once a week for
four (4) weeks.
Thia tb- i* d*v o' 19*3.
8TBYLK C PEARSON
Sworn and subscribed to me
the It dav o Nw«mh*r, 1963.
OERTBTTT>E BURNHAM
Notary Public, DeKalb County, Ga.
/N i n cj A
Cheskis—Goldberg
Mr and Mrs. Louis Cheskis of
Augusta, announce the engage
ment of their daughter, Lona
Dean, to Mr Stephen Harris
Goldberg, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Gerson Goldberg, Phila
delphia, Pa.
Miss Cheskis is a graduate of
t h e Academy of Richmond
County and is on leave from
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
where she is majoring in fine
arts.
The bridegroom-elect is a
graduate of Central High School
in Philadelphia. He atended
Temple University where he
was a member of Alpha Epsilon
Pi fraternity. He has attended
Philadelphia Museum College
of Art and is with the US
Ai my at Ft. Knox, Ky.
Gaeser—Garrison
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gaeser
of Williston, S. C., announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Elaine Gaeser, to Robert Joel
Gamson, son of Mr. and Mrs. V.
Gamson of Orlando, Fla., and
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
The bride-elect was graduated
from Brenau Academy, where
she was treasurer of the student
body, president of the underclass
women, a member of the Nation
al Honor Society and an honor
graduate. Miss Gaeser received
her B. A. degree from the Uni
versity of Georgia, where she
served as pledge mother and vice
president of Delta Phi Epsilon,
was a staff member of the Red
and Black and rush advisor. She
was elected to Alpha Lamba
Delta and the sweetheart court
of Alpha Epsilon Pi. Miss Gaeser
is employed by the Atlanta Board
of Education.
Mr. Gamson received a B.A.
degree from the University of
South Carolina, where he was a
member of the Euphradian So
ciety, Alpha Kappa Psi, Air Force
ROTC and Hillel. The future
bridegroom is employed in At
lanta.
The wedding will take place
Dec. 26 at the B’nai B'rith Jacobs
Synagogue of Savannah.
Stone—Spiller
Mrs. Alfred Stone of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., announces the
engagement of her daughter, Bil
lie Gail, to Warren H. Spiller,
son of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Spiller
of St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
The bride-elect’s maternal grand
parents were the late Mr. and
Mrs. Sol B. Eplan, long time resi
dents of Atlanta.
Miss Stone, a graduate of Ft.
Lauderdale High School, is pres
ently an education major at the
University of Florida where she
served as president of her dorm
itory.
Her fiance will be graduating
from the University of Florida in
April. He is president of Phi Ep
silon Pi social fraternity, and a
member of Pi Sigma Alpha, po
litical science honorary fraternity.
After their wedding on May 9,
the couple will reside in the Vir
gin Islands.
TRANSMISSION
TROrilLES?
• leaking,
• slipping, or
• not changing
properly
(ALL
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Miunment ( ompam
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Geffen—Monson
Rabbi and Mrs. Joel S. Geffen
of New York City have announced
the engagement of their daugh
ter, Miss Rela Mintz Geffen, to
Michael Allan Monson, son of Mr
and Mrs. Leo Monson of West
Robury, Mass.
The prospective bride whose
father is director of the Depart
ment of Field Activities and
Community Education of the
Jewish Theological Seminary of
America, is a junior of the com
bined program of the School of
General Studies of Columbia Uni
versity and the Jewish Theolog
ical Seminary of America. She is
the president of the Student Body
of the Seminary’s Teachers In
stitute and Seminary College of
Jewish Studies. Miss Geffen is
an alumna of the North Senior
High School of Great Neck, New
York. In 1960-61 she was a stu
dent at the Institute for Youth
Leaders from Abroad in Jeru
salem.
The bride-to-be's pat e r n a 1
grandfather is Rabbi Tobias Gef
fen of Atlanta, dean of the Orth
odox Rabbinate of the Southeast.
Mr. Monson is a senior at
Lehigh University in Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania, and has served as
President of the Hillel Founda
tion and Interfaith Council. He
is an alumnus of the Boston Latin
School. Upon graduation from
Lehigh, Mr. Monson plans to enter
the Rabbinical School of the Jew-
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