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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, June 19, 1964
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION FOR AND
ORDER GRANTING CHARTER
GEORGIA, FULTON COUNTY
To the Superior Court of said Coun
ty:
The petition of DAVID GERSHON.
ISADOKE RUDEN and R. MONRorf
SCHWARTZ, whose post office address
1* 730 Healey Building, Atlanta, Geor
gia, respectfully shows:
1. They desire for themselves, their
associates and successors to be incor
porated under the name of v
BRIARCLIFF NURSING HOME.
INC.
for a period of thirtv-five (35) years,
with all of the privileges of renewal
given to similar corporations by law.
2. The principal office of said corp
oration shall be in Fulton County,
Georgia, but the corporation shall have
the privilege of establishing branch
offices elsewhere, both within and
without the State of Georgia.
3. The object of the corporation Is
pecuniary gain to itself and its stock
holders.
4. The general nature of the busi
ness to be transacted by the corpora
tion shall be the operation of a
nursing home or of nursing homes,
and to do any and all acts and things
necessary, convenient, expedient, ancil
lary or in aid to the accomplishment
of the foregoing, including, without
limitation, the right to own, buy, rent,
lease, and/or manage real estate nec
essary or convenient to carry out the
above purposes.
5. The authorized capital of the corp
oration shall be $250,000.00 to be di
vided into Class “A” and Class “B”
Common Stock in the following man
ner and with the following powers,
privileges and immunities, towit:
Said common stock shall consist of
1250 shares of Class “A” Common
Stock, and 1250 shares of Class “B”
Common Stock, both Class “A" and
Class “B” shares having a par value
of $100.00 per share. Both said Class
“A” and Class “B” Common Stock
shall each have the same rights, privi
leges and immunities, except, however,
that each and singular, every share
of said Class “A*’ Common Stock shall
have no voting rights whatsover.
Shares of non-voting common stock
shall be plainly stamped "Non Voting."
The holders of the shares of non
voting stock shall not be entitled to
notice of any meetings of stockholders
and shall not be entitled to vote upon
any question whatsoever which may
be presented and decided upon at any
meeting of stockholders. The register
ed holders of such non-voting stock
shall be entitled to participate, share
for share, with the holders of the
common stock having the voting power
In any dividends or In any distribu
tions in liquidation which mav here
after be declared and paid by the
corporation.
However, the amount of capital with
which the corporation shall be«dn busi
ness shall be not less than $50.000 00.
6 The corporation shall have the
authority to issue shares of stock for
sirch consideration or considerations
in monev, property or services, at a
fair valuation thereof, as shall be
fixed from time to time and at anv
time bv a maloritv vote of the Board
of Directors. The corporation shall be
authorized to issue additional shares
up to the maximum numbers stated
above, and. from tlm^ to time, to re
duce the amount of canltnl outstand
Ine hut not b^low the minimum pbeve
stated, and all this imon a majority
vote r*f the Board of Directors.
7. T'he corporation shall have the
rirht to amend Its charter in form or
in substance upon the affirmative vote
of a maloHtv of the stock entitled
to vote which shall be outstanding
at anv time.
WHEREFORE, Petitioners pray that
BRIARCLIFF NURSING HOME. INC.
be incorporated under the laws of
Georgia and that said Corporation
have all of the rights, powers, privi
leges and immmunlties which are here
inabove set forth and such others as
now, or may hereafter be allowed,
lowed to corporatlos of like nature,
under the laws of the State of Geor
gia.
GERSHON, RUDEN
& SCHWARTZ
Attorneys for Petitioners
730 Healey Building
Atlanta 3. Georgia
JA 4 4991
ORDER
The foregoing petition to secure a
charter under the name of
“BRIARCLIFF NURSING HOME
INC.”
has been duly presented to me, and
read and considered; and it appearing
that said petition is within the Purview
and intention of the laws of this State
applicable thereto and it further ap
pearing that all of said laws have been
U fT is" 1 * * 4 5 6 7 * 9 ^THEREUPON CONSIDERED.
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that said
petition be and the same Is hereby
granted; and petitioners, their associ
ates and assigns are hereby Incorpor
ated and made a bo< J y „SSV*Rri TTFE
the name and style of BRIARCLIIFF
NURSING HOME. INC." forondluring
the period of 35 years. w Bh ‘he privl-
lege of renewal at the expiration of
that time, and with all the rights,
powers Privileges and Immunities as
a?e ^ovlded by the laws of Georgia
as they now exist or may hereafter
This 10 dav of June. 1964
CLAUDE D SHAW
Judge. Superior Court.
Atlanta Judicial Circuit
June l»,l«,July3,10
As We Were Saying.
BY ROBERT SEGAL
HOLLYWOOD VS. CLERGY
ON PRAYER AMENDMENTS . . .
Sitting across the table from one
of the congressmen who has, as a
member of the House Judiciary
Committee, heard a good part of the
miles of testimony for and against
the proposed amendments to the
Bill of Rights, you realize what a
momentous issue is now before the
nation. “Aside from the civil rights
hill, 1 have never received so much
mail on any matter up before Con
gress in my nearly 20 years there,''
he says.
And how does he stand on the
kinds of businesses;
(b) To own, buy, sell, barter, ex
change, Improve, lease, rent, use,
manage, encumber, mortgage, transfer,
assign and otherwise dispose of and
deal In real estate and personal prop
erty of all kinds of character what
soever;
(c) To borrow and lend money, with
or without security, by mortgage, deed
of trust, security deed, or otherwise,
on real or personal property;
(d) To acquire, own, buy and sell Its
own stock;
(e) To subscribe for, purchase, own,
hold, sell and dispose of stocks, bonds
or other obligations of any other corp
oration and association;
(f) To engage in any and all forms
of business and other activities not
specifically prohibited by law, and not
requiring special charter.
4. Petitioners further desire that said
Corporation be vested with all the
rights and powers now- or hereafter
Jiven to do any and all things which
may he needful or proper in the op
eration of the above described busi
ness, and that said Corporation have
all of the powers enumerated in Sec
tions 22 1827 and 22 1828. Georgia Code
Annotated, and such other powers as
may hereafter be given by law.
5. The maximum number of shares
of capital stock which the Corporation
shall be authorized to Issue and have
outstanding at any one time shall be
5.000 shares of common stock with the
par value of Ten ($10.00) Dollars per
share.
6. The amount of capital with which
the Corporation shall begin business
shall not be less than $200.00
7. The Corporation desires the right
to issue shares of stock for such con
sideration or considerations in money,
property, or services, or a comblna
9. The principal office of said Corp
oration shall be in Fulton County,
Georgia, but petitioners desire the
right and privilege of establishing of
flees and branches elsewhere, both
within and without the State of Geor
gia.
from time to time by a majority vote
of that time.
tence for thirty-five (35) years with the
privilege of renewal at the expiration
of the Board of Directors.
WHEREFORE. Petitioners prav that
ARTHUR BERKOWITZ. INC be in
corporated under the laws of Georgia
and that said Corporation have all of
the rights, powers, privileges and Im
munlfles which are hereinabove set
forth and such others as are now, or
may hereafter be. allowed to corpora
tions of like nature under the laws
of the State of Georgia.
GERSHON. RUDEN
& SCHWARTZ
Attorney for Petitioners
730 Healey Building
Atlanta 3, Georgia
JA 4 4991
ORDER
The foregoing petition to secure a
charter under the name of
"ARTHUR BERKOWITZ, INC."
has been duly presented to me, and
read and considered; and It appearing
that said petition is within the purview
and intention of the laws of this State
applicable thereto and It further ap
pearing that all of said laws have been
fully complied with;
IT IS THEREUPON CONSIDERED.
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that said
petition be and the same is hereby
granted; and petitioners, their associates
and assigns are hereby Incorporated
and made a body politic under the
name and style of "ARTHUR BERK
OWITZ, INC.” for and during the
period of 35 years, with the privilege
of renewal at the expiration of that
time, and with all the rights, powers,
privileges and Immunities as are pro
vided by the laws of Georgia as they
now exist or mav hereafter exist.
This 27 day of May, 1964.
s/sam Phillips mckenzie
Judge, Superior Court,
Atlanta Judicial Circuit
scores of pressure proposals "to put
prayer, God, and the Bible back
into the public schools'” He isn’t
saying; he’s a member of the con
gressional jury, and he’s listening
carefully and reading his mail.
Well, perhaps not exactly reading
it Which congressman can manage
all that? Let’s say he’s weighing it.
Rabbi Maurice N. Kisendrath,
President of the Union of American
Hebrew Congregation, had heard
ulxiut this torrent of mail. When he
appeared before the House Judiciary
Committee he said: "The responsi
bility of the legislator is the weigh
ing of conscience and principle and
not the weighing of mail. The proph
et said, ‘Thou art the man.’ He did
not say, Thou art the clerk, or the
machine, to register the Gallup
Poll.’ If the foundations of the Con
stitution were to how to the wind
of whatever passion stirs each gen
eration. the entire Bill of Rights
would already be a relic of his
tory ’’
The saddest day of the hearings
Iierhaps came when Hollywood des
cended on Capital Hill. That was
the day carefully-prepared movie
scripts with cute stage directions
for those testifying were featured in
the otherwise solemn arena wherein
ihe Congress of the United States is
in a race to catch up with the facts
of our religioiisly-pluralistic Amer
ican society.
Atheists and agnostics were given
what-for by the Hollywood caravan;
and at the height of (he wide-screen
melodrama, Victor Jory, in a burst
of religious and patriotic fervor,
cried: “The opposition f to the
Becker Amendment' screams like a
constantly echoing parrot, Keep your
religion in your church and home!
. Well, gentlemen, we may as
well speak frankly—and we won’t
mince words—that same suggestion
is pnrrotted in Russia.”
It was good to be thus reassured
that there still is religion in Russia.
We had been hearing differently in
the protest meetings when against
Soviet anti-Semitism But perhaps
more importantly, the Hollywood
observation that those who now are
trying to keep the the sacred Amer
ican principle of religious freedom
inviolate, those who are working so
hard to keep the state’s hands off
the delicate provinces of religion,
are emulating the Russian example
is a bitter contradiction indeed Hol
lywood not only presents Class C
scripts in Washington; it gets its
history twisted.
Of all the presentations made
before the House Judiciary Commit
tee. none has been more important
than that of Father William .T. Ken-
ealv. S.T.. whoso gentle eloquence
and solid logic were marked. A
beloved nriest and brilliant professor
of law. Father Keneallv was among
the first in the nation to face up
publicly to the excesses and threats
of the late Senator Joe McCarthy
He knows the price we shall have
to pay if frenzied advocates succeed
in their busy work of eating into the
lovingly-constructed fabric of the
Bill of Rights.
Father Konealy dipped back into
history to cite state court actions
outlawing compulsory religious exer
cises in the public schools: Wis
consin in 1890; Illinois in 1910; Ix>ui-
siana in 1915; Washington in 1918;
• • •
South Dakota in 1929. He spoke from
knowledge as priest, scholar, lawyer,
son of an Irish Catholic immigrant
father. He knew well the nature of
obloquy and vilification faced by
Catholics when they went courage
ously to the courts 50 and 70 years
ago to protect the religious sensi
bilities of their children obliged to
participate in Protestant prayers
and hymn singing in the public
schools of those days.
Father Kenealy hammered away
at the heart of the present argument
—that only voluntary prayer is now
intended. He gave instance upon in
stance of court decisions on this
veiy issue, saying: “The fact that
some pupils, or theoretically all
pupils, may be excused from the
officially-scheduled religious exer
cises does not obscure the obligatory
nature of the ceremony, nor does it
mitigate the serious practical pres
sure upon the dissenting child to
conform to the official orthodoxy.”
One of our rabbis has made point
ed reference to pro-Becker Amend
ment forces presently at work in
persistent efforts “to drum religious
liberty out of the American Consti
tution ” Tragic it is indeed that
other rabbis (just a few to be sure)
are yielding to the blandishments of
those who want “voluntary prayers”
in the classroom. They mean well
but they do not yet grasp the true
nature of the American experiment.
Is it too much to ask them to mark
Father Kenealy’s words:
“We are a pluralistic society
whose members adhere to many re
ligions and to none We are a de
mocratic sixdety whose members,
regardless of religious faith or lack
thereof, stand equal before the law
Therefore the constitutional free
exercise of religion means, not
merely freedom of religion, but also
freedom from religion as far as state
coercion or pressure is concerned.’’
termites
worfefjP^
till
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legal notice
TATE OF GEORGIA
OUNTY OF Fin,TON
To the Superior Court of said Coun
The petition of ABTITUBBFHKO
TTZ end ROSE BERKOWITZ. whose
Mt of fire address la 7369 Palmour
rive NF Atlanta. Georgia, and
AVID GERSHON. whose nost office
ddresa la 730 Healev Building, Atlan-
* 3, Georgia, respectfully shows:
L Petitioners desire for themselves,
heir associates successors and assigns
0 be Inr-onvirateil under the name of
■‘ARTHUR BERKOWITZ. INC.”
2 The oblect of aald Corporation Is
•ecuntarv vain and profit to Itself and
Is stockholders.
3 The general nature of the business
h.,, ‘ ra nsacted bv said Corporation
hall be as follows:
les*. T° r '"? durt a general agency busl-
rt ,f Ct ' and to »PPolnt other* to
roker agent, special agent.
manufacturer’s agent,
ne£hin 'r " nd commission
octillions' .1°/ Individuals, firms, as-
rtbutlon cor Porations In the dls-
7 b “v, "’ ktPuccbsse and sale
^d no^,orlV °f Property, both real
of th^ ' r* Ut,n « ‘o «ny and all
Ion of the same, as .hall be fixed
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Gresham Plaza
Shopping Center
2541 Gresham Road, 8.E.
Phone DR. 8 0484
N. E. Plaza
Shopping Center
3343 Buford Hwy., N.E.
Phone ME. 6-5294
Rrookhaven
4110 Peachtree Rd„ N.W.
Phone CE. 3-7938
Coin-Operated Laundry
Coin-Operated Dry
Cleaning
Briarcliff
Shopping Center
Corner of Briarcliff
& Clairmont
Phone 634-2795
Toco Hills
Shopping Center
Corner of Druid
Hills & LaVista Rds.
Phone ME. 6-4922