Newspaper Page Text
Friday, June 5, 1964
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Pi(( Eire
A dopted by A ttan tan
"This is Choi Hung, whoso father
is dead and whose mother is para
lyzed in tiie right arm and leg. She
and her mother, anil her brother.
Luk Chuen, 13, have just managed
to keep from starvation anti utter
want on a very limited relief ”
Thus was Atlanta insurance man
I ferry Rittenbaum, introduced by
mail, to the eight-year-old Chinese
gu'l he has financially "adopted"
through Foster Parents' Plan, Inc.
Mr. Kittenhaum, active in civic
and Jewish affair . said, "Though
the adoption is financial, not legal,
the relationship is warm and per
sonal.” Kaeh month the child writes
to "Dear Foster Parent."
The letter received by Mr Kitten
l>aum from the Foster Parents' Plan
further describes Chung Choi Hung
as a quiet, good-mannered little girl
LEGAL NOTIC E
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF FULTON
To the Superior Court of said Coun
ty:
The petition of ARTHUR BF.RKO
WITZ, whose post office address Is
23f»9 Palmour Drive. NK. Atlanta, Geor
*la, and DAVII) GERSHON, whose post
office address is 730 Healev Building,
Atlanta 3. Georgia, resprctifullv show's.
1. Petitioners desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and assigns
to he ineornorated under tin* name of
“ARTHUR BKRKOWITZ. INC "
2. The object of said Corporation is
pecuniary eain and profit to itself and
its stockholders.
3. Tin» general nature of the business
to he transacted bv said Corporation
shall he as follows:
(a) To conduct a general agency bus!
ness, to act, and to appoint others to
act as general agent, special agent,
broker, factor, manufacturer’s agent,
representative and commission
merchant, for individuals, firms, as
sociations and corporations in the dis
tribution, delivery, purchase and sale
of every kind of property, both real
and personal, relating to an> and all
kinds of businesses:
(b) To own. buy. sell, barter, ex
change, improve, lease. rent. use.
manage, encumber. mort'Mge. transfer,
assign and otherwise dispose of and
deal in real estate and personal prop
ertv of all kinds of character what
tc) To borrow and lend monev. with
or without security, bv mortgage. d»*ed
of trust, security deed, or otherwise,
on real or personal property;
(d) To acquire, own. buy and sell its
own stork;
(o) To subscribe for. purchase, own.
hold, sell and dispose of storks, bonds
or other obligations of anv other corp
oration and association;
(D To engage In anv and all forms
of business and other activities not
specifically prohibited bv law. and not
renulHp'* special charter
•1 Petitioners further desire that s^ld
rornoratlon be vested with all the
rights and powers now or hereafter
dven to do anv and all things which
mav bo needful or prooer in the on
oration of the above described busi
ness. and that said Corporation have
all of tho nowers enumerated In
lions 00.1R27 and 2'* 182ft Geor«da Code
Annotated, and such other nowers ns
mav hereafter he given bv law’.
5. T^e max*mum number of shares
of canital stock which the Corporation
shall be authorized to Issue and have
outstanding at anv one time s^-dl he
5 000 shares of common stoek "1th the
par value of Ten ($10 00) Dollars per
share
0. The amount of capital with which
the Corporation shall berdn business
thall not be less than $200 00
7. The Corporation desires the right
with a good deal ol gentle charm
is in the third grade and her
favori’e subjects are arithmetic, Chi-
hose and English,
Of the $15.00 monthly contributed
by Mr Kitlenbaum. Choi Himg is
assured of a monthly cash grant of
$8.00, clothing, special medical care
and an education.
In the poverty-ridden, squalor-fill -
ed, disease-laden areas of the world
served by FI Mb, the practical mon
etary assistance is of the utmost
importance, blit just as important
to the “adopted" children and their
families is a friend’s warm and kind
ly reassurance. It is an immeasura
ble comfort to these people and a
gift they will treasure with a last
ing gratitude and affection.
Mr. Kittenbaum said, “The per
son.)! satisfaction of helping one of
the 33.000 children currently being
helped through PLAN is immense.”
Foster Parents’ Plan, In<\, with
headquarters at 352 Park Avenue
South, New York. New York, has
graduated nnre than 76.(XX) children
of 28 nationalities from its care and
the good work goes on through tho
generosity of those who share with
tin >o who have nothing.
to issue sharps of stock for such con
sioVration or considerations in money,
property, or services, or a combina
t-on of the same, as shall bo fixed
from lime to time by a majority vote
of the Board of Directors.
8 The Corporation shall have exis
tence for thirty-five (35) years with the
privilege of renewal at the expiration
of that time.
9 The principal office of said Corp
oration shall he In Fulton County,
Georgia, but petitioners desire the
n ht and privilege of establishing of
fices and branches elsewhere, both
within and without the State of Geor
gia
WHEREFORE. Petitioners prav that
\KTIHR BKRKOWITZ. INC. be in
corpora!ed under the laws of Georgia
and that said Corporation have all of
the rights, powers, privileges and im
munities which are hereinabove set
forth and such others as are now. or
mav hereafter be. allowed to corpora
tions of like nature under the laws
of the St-u.. of Georgia.
GERSHON. Rl*DKN
& SCHNVARTZ
Attorney for Petitioners
730 Healev Building
Atlanta 3. Georgia
,TA 4 4091
OR DP R
The fore-elm* petition to secure a
charter unH.>r th*» name of
“ARTHUR BKRKOWITZ. INC”
has been dulv presented to me.'and
r,»;»d and considered: and it appearing
that sn«d petition is within the mirviow
and Intention of the laws of this State
applicable thereto and it further ap
pearing that all of said laws have been
fu”v complied with; l
it 1 t< T" VI lFl ,nnv CONSIDER FT).
ORnFREP AND ADJUDGED that said
petition be and the same is hereby
granted: and petitioners tbelr associates
and assigns are hcrcbv incorporated
and mad*' ,a bodv pnPtie under th**
name and stvle of “ARTHUR BERK
OWTT7. INC ” for and durin** the
period of 35 veaes. with the privilege
of renewal at tb«' expiration of that
time and w«h all the rights, powers.
P Hvil»*cs and Immunities as are Pro
vided bv the laws of Georgia as they
non exUt or mav hereafter exist
This 27 dav of Mav. 1984
s/SAM PHD J -IPS MoKENZTF.
Judge. Superior Court.
Atlanta Judicial Circuit
Urge Communal Workers To
Act on Challenging Problems
LOS ANGL1.ES, (JTA)—The Jew
ish communal workers in the United
States must face a series of prob
lems challenging every Jew and
every American today, and must act
vigorously to help solve those prob
lems, 1,000 members of the Na
tional Conference of Jewish Com
munal Service were warned here
Saturday night
The warning and the call to ac
tion were voiced by Jacob T. Zuk-
erman of New York, president of
the Conference, in an address here
opening the organization’s five-day
With annual assembly. Meeting in
the West for the first time in its
history, the Conference was joined
by a number of associate groups,
including the National Association
of Jewish Center Workers, the Na
tional Council for Jewish Educa
tion, the Association of Jewish
Communal Relations Workers and
the National Association of Jewish
Homes for the Aged.
Noting that “the whole face of
America and the rest of the world
has been altered by the impact of
revolutionizing forces” and that “we
in Jewish life have been similarly
affected by the changing panorama,”
Mr, Zukerman said:
“We who work so closely with
Jewish families really did not need
the very challenging statistics on
Jewish intermarriage to make us
aware of. its effect upon the lives
not only of those who intermarry
but of their families. We who care
for Jewish children, or who teach
them or play with them or live with
them, and often for them, have al
ways l>een conscious of the needs of
many of these children for Jewish
training and education. We who have
worked with immigrant and uproot
ed families have long been familiar
with problems of relocation and re
habilitation.
"Yet in these critical Limes, when
our fellow Jews behind the Iron Cur-
Eternal Light
Again to Offer
“Words We Live By”
The 12th consecutive Summer
series of "The Words We Live By."
centering on the topic, "Moral Di
lemmas of the Bible,” will begin on
NBC Radio's "The Eternal Light'
Sunday, June 7 (12:30 p. m. EDT).
The participants in the series of
15 weekly conversations will be
Mark Van Daren, author, critic, Pul
itzer Prize-winning poet and profes
sor emeritus of English at Columbia
University, and Maurice Samuel, au
thor and lecturer.
Their topics for June are Sunday.
June 7—"Tlie Bible as a Dilemma'.
Sunday, June 14—“The Carden of
Eden"; Sunday. June 21 — “The
Grand Inquisitor”: Sunday. June 28
—"Science and the Humanities.”
The program, an NBC Public Af
fairs presentation, is produced in
cooperation with the National Coun
cil of Churches
Depict States Rights
Party as Anti-Jewish
MADISON, Wise. i.JTA>—The Na
tional States Rights party, based in
Birmingham and claiming to be the
third largest party in the country,
was depicted here as promoting “a
homo-grown version of Nazi racism"
and as advocating "red-neck anti-
Semitism, anti-Negroism and a
strong undercurrent of clan-type
anti-Catholicisim "
An article in the June issue of
"Progressive” magazine said that
the party claimed to have units in
38 states, many of them in large
cities, including Chicago, New York,
Ixis Angeles, Atlanta, Washington
and Jacksonville The party, accord
ing to the article, uses a uniform
reminiscent of German storm
troopers and the symbol of the
lightning bolt used by the Hitler
Youth Movement.
Last year, the article charged, the
National States Rights party's news
papers reprinted Iho May 1943 issue
of Julius Stretcher'santi-Semilic Nazi
publication, IJer Stucrmer. The
article warned that the group could
not be considered “harmless crack
pots” as long as “they can escalate
hate into violence.”
tain are being subjected to more re
fined techniques of cultural geno
cide, when others of our brothers
who have built for themselves a
homeland in Israel, a State which
has provided sanctuary and hope, are
menaced by the machinations of a
Nasser, when many thousands of
African Jews must be helped to find
a way to a new life, when the very
continuity of Jewish life is threat
ened by the danger not alone of in
termarriage but of indifference to
Jewish identity — then we, as Jews
and as communal workers, must as
sume a greater share of responsibili
ty for the future of Jewish existence
"We must do so,” Mr Zukerman
stressed,” regard lass of the kind of
■Jews we are — whether religious or
secular, whether Hebraists or Yid-
dishists or English speaking, wheth
er Zionist or non-Zionist, whether we
have hitherto expressed our Jewish
ness through our Jewish studies,
through our service to the Jewish
community, or if only by our accept
ance of ourselves as part of a Jew
ish religious group or people or eth
nicity We who serve the Jewish
community and who so often have
an opportunity to provide leadership,
should be fully prepared to give of
ourselves to the enrichment of Jew
ish living, cultural as well as emo
tional and economic.”
The .Jewish community, Mr. Zuk
erman urged, must be helped "to
face the realities of the accelerated
social revolution” in every area of
activity, from the fight for equality
for Negroes, to the war against pov
erty, to the struggle for implement
ing the rights to live in dignity and
security for all people.
A report prc>|>osing action concern
ing the impact of changing race re
lations on Jewish communal serv
ices will lie presented to the Con
ference next Thursday, on the closing
day of the assembly, Mr. Zukerman
said Altogether, there will be 100
sessions held during the Conference
Some, like last night’s opening meet
ing, will be general sessions. Others
Arab Boycott
League Mailing
List Mixed Up
LONDON i JTA i—The letter from
Ihe Jordan Chamber of Commerce
this week was polite and explicit.
It drew tiie attention of the recipi
ent to the fact that his participation
in the Tel Aviv 1964 International
Fair "is likely to ex|>oso you to
innumerable difficulties because it
would entail thorough investigation
into your trade connections with
Israel and subject you to production
of all such documents as may be
required by Arab boycott regula
tions.”
Moreover, the letter said, “your
reputation in Arab commercial
circles will be seriously injured."
Said recipient Josef Frnenkel.
writer and lifelong Zionist: ”1 have
never sold any copies of my bio
graphy of Theodor Her/.l in Amman
but I would like to. 1 am pleased
at the high reputation I am enjoying
in Arab commercial circles.”
will be workshops, meetings of the
associated groups, seminars and
divisional discussions.
I)r. Mordeeal M. Kaplan, noted
Jewish spiritual leader and founder
of the Reronstructtonlst movement,
told the assembled Jewish commun
al workers that every form of Jew
ish social work, whether carried on
in a professional or lay rapacity, has
to be dominated by the overall pur
pose of contributing to the creative
survival of the Jewish people.
“Central to all efforts at Jewish
readjustment is the need of clearly
defining the status of the Jews in
relation to the rest of the world,” he
said “That status should be based
upon the assumption that the disper
sion of the Jews must henceforth be
accepted as a permanent condition.
That does not mean, however, that
we can afford to float around freely
among the nations as a formless,
agglomerate of individuals.”
Dr. Kaplan stressed that “Judaism
required at least one place in the
world where it may be the primary
one for its adherents. Judaism can
not maintain its character as a
civilization, nor can the Jewish
people maintain its sense of religio-
euRural unity without a homeland,” -
he said, adding that “the pursuit of
activities to ensure the stability and
security of the State of Israel as in
dispensable to the survival of the
Jewish people throughout the world.”
Defends I*ope Pius XII
Italian Government Denounces
"Slanderous Campaign"
ROME (JTA)—The Italian Foreign
Ministry issued a communique de
nouncing what it called “the sland
erous campaign against the memory
of Pope Pius XII by some Italian
press organs.” The Ministry state
ment said that the campaign was
"strongly deplored” by the Italian
Government which includes persons
“who are living witnesses of the
late Pope's fatherly solicitude in de
fense of the supreme values of hu
manity and civilization.”
The Socialist paper, “Avanti,”
sharply criticized the intervention
into the matter by the Foreign Min
istry, declaring that, if some papers
“slandered” the memory of Pope
Pius XII, it was up to the judiciary
to rule on it. nol the Foreign Min
istry
At a press conference in the offices
of the Jesuit publication Civilta Cat-
tolica. meanwhile, Father Martini
charged that the "historical docu
mentation” of Rolf Hochhuth, author
of the play, "The Deputy,” was
“biased selection” from items of
public knowledge since Hochhuth
was unable to consult either the
archieves of the Vatican or those of
other countries. He denounced what
he called Hochhuth’s "misuse” of
the writings of Father Leiber and
Cardinal Tardini.
Father Martini said that there was
documentation to show that Papal
intervention at the time would have
increased the sufferings of the Jews
who had been aided by Christians.
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