Newspaper Page Text
Page Six.
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, June 9, 1967/
LEGAL NOTICE
GEORGIA. FTJLTON COUNTY)
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF SAID COUNTY:
The petition of I. T. COHEN, of 1120
First National Bank Bulletins, Atlanta,
Georgia: DAVID J. HARRIS, SOS Stand
ard Federal Building, Atlanta, Georgia;
and HARRY LANE SIEGEL, BM Ply
mouth Road, N. E, Atlanta, Georgia,
respectfully shows:
1.
Petitioners desire to farm a corp
oration to be known as AHAVAIT1
ACHIM FOUNDATION, INC., for a per
iod of thirty-five (18) years, with the
right of renewals for similar addition
al periods as provided by law, with
Its principal office located In Fulton
County, Georgia.
The corporation shall have no cap
ital stock and no shareholders; and
no trustee or other Individuals shall
at any time have any Interest In the
earnings or the Income of the corp
oration; no substantial part of Its
assets may be used for carrying on
propaganda , or otherwise attempting
to affect legislation; and no dividend
or returns of any charter nor any
part of the assets of the corporation
shall ever be returned to any of the
Incorporators or to any trustee thereof
either upon dissolution or otherwise.
8.
Said corporation shall have no capital
stock and Is not organized for pecun
iary gain.
4.
Said corporation shall be organized
< and shall be operated for religious,
philanthropic, charitable and educa
tional purposes and shall be support
ed In whole or In part by voluntary
contributions and to that end the corp
oration Is authorized to solicit, accept,
receive, hold and administer, invest
and disperse, for the purposes men
tioned aforesaid, such funds and other
property of every kind of character,
Including real, personal and Intangible
assets of every kind or character, as
from time to time may be given to It
by any person, firm or corporation,
and to distribute and make financial
and other types of contributions for
the purposes of maintaining, operat
ing, expanding and Increasing the fa
cilities of AHAVATH ACHIM CONGRE
GATION, Including the purchasing of
land, making of capital Improvements,
repairs and maintenance of physical
facilities, payment of general ex
penses of operation, supplementation
of compensation paid to employees,
establishment and maintenance of
education facilities and any and all
other Items of expenditure which, in
the discretion of the Board of Trus
tees may insure to the general wel
fare and benefit of said AHAVATH
ACHIM CONGREGATION. The Board
of Trustees shall have complete dis
cretion and control as to what por
tion of property or Income held by
the corporation shall be devoted to
the authorized purposes. Such trus
tees may make such Investments, ir
respective of whether such Invest
ments may be legal Investments for
trust funds under the laws of Geor
gia and said corporation shall have
the power to pay, own, hold, manage,
lease and sell real and personal prop
erty Including stocks, bonds, evidence
of Indebtedness and other choses in
action; and shall have all other powers
and authority generally granted corp
orations of similar nature under the
laws of this state, subject to the
restrictions and limitations herein con
tained; to receive property, real per
sonal or mixed In trust under the
terms of any will, gift, deed of trust,
or other trust Instrument and to ad
minister the same under the powers
contained In the will or trust Instru
ment under which this property Is
received; to agree upon the conditions
thereof with the donors or testators,
for the purposes provided In this
charter.
5.
The governing Board of Trustees of
this corporation shall consist of not
less than fifteen (15) or more than
thirty-three (33) members as a Board
of Trustees. Petitioners desire that I.
T. COHEN, MEYER L. BALSER, NOR
MAN H. DIAMOND, MORTON P. LE
VINE, SIMON- I. MENDEL, RALPH L.
SAUL, MARVIN L. SINGER, HARRY
LANE SIEGEL, HARRY DWOSKIN,
MORRIS ARNOVITZ, JORH. GERSHON,
HERSCHELL HURWITZ, BEN HYMAN,
MORTON H. SROCHI, and MAX L.
KUNIANSKY, together with with all
of the past presidents of AHAVATH
ACHIM CONGREGATION, shall be
known as the first Board of Trustees of
said corporation to serve until their
first annual meeting of said corporation
and until their successors have been
elected and qualified. After the first
annual meeting the TriMfees shall be
elected for various terms for a period
of not less than one year or more
than four years. There shall be no
prohibition against a Trustee being re
elected to serve for any number of
successive terms. Every Trustee so
elected shall be a member In good
standing of said AHAVATH. ACHIM
CONGREGATION, INC., a corporation
of Fulton County, Georgia, a*d in the
event any member of the.-Board of
. Trustees of this corporation should
cease to be a member of good stand
ing of said AHAVATH ACHIM
CONGREGATION, IN<?., then immedi
ately upon such happening he shall
no longer be a member of the Board
of Trustees of this corporation and
such vacancy of the Board of Trus
tees shall bq filled as set out In the
By-Laws of said corporation.
6.
The petitioners desire that they
shall have authority by majority of
said Board of Trustees, to adopt by
laws and rules for the conduct of
said corporation, either by their whole
body or by a subdivision or by com
mittees thereof.
7.
By two-thirds vote of the Trustees,
this chapter may be surrendered, in
which event the assets of the corp
oration shall be applied to the purp
oses for which the corporation is or
ganized, but In no event shall any
benefit accrue to any of the Incorp
orators of the corporation or any
trustee thereof.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray that
they, their successors and assigns, be
Incorporated under the name and style
aforsaald, with all the rlghta, powers
and privileges herein provided, togeth
er with any additional rights, powers
and .privileges now authorized or
which may hereafter be authorized by
the laws of the State of Georgia to
corporations of similar nature, subject
to the restrictions and limitations
ware In named. .
SMITH, COHEN,
RINGEL, KOHLER,
MARTIN A LOWE
By; s| Chas. W. Bergman
Attorneys for Petitioners
1238 First National Bank Bldg.
Atlanta, Georgia
OR DIR
The foregoing application for char
ter having been read and considered,
and
It ippearlnf that the seme Is within
the purview end Intention of the lews
of the State of Georgia, and
It appearing further from a cer
tificate of the Secretary of State of
the State of Georgia that the name
of the proposed corporation Is not the
name of any other corporation reg
istered In the records of the Secre-,
t *It r Is*ORDERED that said application
be granted and a charter issued under
the name AHAVATH ACHIM FOUN
DATION, INC., with all the rights,
powers, privileges and Immunities a*
therein prayed and as may be granted
to similar corporations by the laws of
this State.
This 18 day of May, 198T.
si STONEWALL DYER
Judge, Fulton County
Superior Court
May24rJune2,t,U
LEGAL NOTICE
FULTON COUNTY
GEORGIA
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF FULTON COUNTY;
The petition of MARY ELLEN LEON
ARD. MAUREEN V CROWE, and
MARVIN H. ZION respectively shows;
1.
Petitioners desire for themselves,
their associates, and assigns, to be In
corporated under the laws of the State
\ of Georgia for a period of thirty-five
\<35) years, with the right of renewal
from time to time under the name
and style of:
“T. D. I. FRANCHISING, INC.”
2.
The object of said corporation la
pecuniary gain and profit to its stock
holders.
3.
The general nature of the business
to be transacted Is to buy, sell, ex
change, lease, or otherwise acquire,
to own, operate, maintain, and to sell,
mortgage, lease, and otherwise dis
pose of, eating establshments, stores,
or departments therein, and to con
duct therein restaurants and|or gen
eral merchandising businesses, and to
therein conduct the business of man
ufacturing, processing, buying, selling,
Importing, exporting, and otherwise
dealing In, at wholesale or retail, for
itself, or as agent or broker for others,
quantities of personal property of
every nature and description, includ
ing but not limited to, food Items,
and to sell franchises for, the opera
tion of same; to buy, sell, exchange,
lease, manufacture, repair, and gen
erally deal In portable, self-contained
restaurants and franchises for the op
eration of same under systems per
fected by the corporation; to adver
tise, promote, and develop the corpor
ation’s business and the businesses of
franchise purchasers by and through
the advertising medium by use of
printed, recorded, or filmed material
or by means of radio, television, news
papers, books, booklets, prospectuses,
magazines, circulators, pamphlets, and
any and all other similar material;
and to do any and all other acts per
taining to any of the above activ
ities.
4.
The corporation shall have the
power, generally and without any
limitation or restriction whatsoever,
to hold, purchase, own, deal In, mort
gage or convey real estate and per
sonal property In this State and In
any other State or County. The corpor
ation shall have the power to enter
into, or become a partner In, any ar
rangement for sharing profits, union
of Interests, cooperation, joint ven
ture or otherwise, with any person,
firm, or corporation now carrying on
or about to carry on any business
which this corporation has the direct
or Incidental authority to pursue. The
corporation shall have the further
power to enter Into any kind of co
operative or profitsharing plan, pen
sion plans, retirement plans, deferred
compensation plans and agreements,
Incentive plans of any kind or nature
whatsover.
. 5.
The corporation shall have the
power, generally and without any lim
itation or restriction whatsoever, to
borrow money and make loans se
cured by any or all corporate assets,
as the right to make unsecured loans.
As We Were Saying
(A Seven Arts Feature)
Trying with his hands, his
heart, and his head to hold the
Union together a little over 100
years ago, President Lincoln
spoke words applicable to the
crisis faced now by President
Johnson:
“The dogmas of the quiet
past are inadequate to the
stormy present. The occas
ion is piled high with diffi
culty and we must rise—
with the Occasion. As our
case is new, so we must
think anew, and act anew.
We must disenthrall our
selves, and then we shall
save our country.’’
Having thus dramatized the di
lemma during the American
Civil War and challenged him
self and his countrymen alike to
chart advances in a bloody con
flict, Lincoln did not assert that
people differing with him were
unpatriotic. A dissenter himself
during America’s war against
Mexico, he respected differences
and attempted to persuade men
through reason, not by pressuring
them into acceptance of his views.
Today, the honest brooding
The corporation shall have the
powers now or hereafter given by law
to every corporation by virtue of its
existence as such under the laws of
Georgia except Insofar as said powers
may be added to or limited herein.
7.
(a) There shall be one class of stock,
to be common stock of $10.00 par val
ue. There shall be five thousand (5,-
000) shares authorized.
(b) The minimum amount of cap
ital with which the said corporation
may commence business shall be
$200.00.
8.
The principal office of said corpor
ation shall be in Fulton County, Geor
gia, but petitioners desire the right
of establishing branch offices and
places of business elsewhere both
within and without the State of Geor
gia.
9.
The address of each of the pe
titioners for charter Is 1505 WlUlam-
Oliver Building, Atlanta, Geor
gia 30303.
WHEREFORE, petiUoners pray that •
they be Incorporated under the name
and style aforesaid with the rights,
powers, privileges, and Immunities as
are now or may hereafter be allowed
by law to corporations.
TARLETON & ZION
By: si Marvin H. Zion
Attorneys for Petitioners
1505 Wllllam-Oliver Building
Atlanta, Georgla 303Q3
523 - 2705
ORDER
The within and forgoing petition
read and considered, and It appearing
to the Court that the same Is legiti
mately within the purview and inten
tion of the laws of this State govern
ing the granting of corporate charters,
and it further appearing from the
certificate of the Secretary of State,
presented to me that the name of the \
proposed corporation Is not the name
of any other now existing corporation
registered In the records of the Sec
retary of State; S
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that
said application be and the same Is
hereby granted, and petitioners are
hereby incorporated under the name
and style of "T. D. I. FRANCHISING,
INC.” with all of the rights, privileges
and immunities prayed or now or
hereafter granted to similar corpora- *
tlons by the laws of this State.
This 22 day of May, 1967.
STONEWALL DYER
JUDGE, Fulton Superior Court
May24,June2,»,16
BY HENRY LEONARD
A
By ROBERT E. SEGAL
over what many solid Americans
hold to be wrong about our fail
ure to extricate ourselves from
Vietnam grow, in a sense, from
an intuitive certainty on the part
of many that “the dogmas of the
quiet past are inadequate to the
stormy present.” We are not
fighting the War of 1914-18 or
the battles of World War II or
the Korean War. We are en
gaged, in an undeclared land war
in Asia, against which we have
been warned by some of our most
astute and bellicose heroes, in
cluding the late Douglas Mac-
Arthur.
Yet we are told by marchers
and hawks that we cannot af
ford the luxury of brooding over
the ugly business across the Pa
cific. Instead, we must hang out
more flags, make stronger vows
“to kill the bastards.”
Indeed, we seem to have in the
United States today a convulsion
over differences, at least 'in some
quarters. At its most traumatic,
this paroxysm of patriotism is
plainly evident in Congressman
F. Edward Hebert’s proposal to
Assistant Attorney General Fred
M. Vinson Jr. that we forget the
First Amendment. Its most bi
zarre manifestation comes in the
assertion by Congressman L.
Mendel Rivers, during the hear
ings on the draft law, that
“there are only two ideologies in
the world — one represented by
Jesus Christ and the other by
the hammer and sickle.” More
than 70 per cent of the 16,000,000
South Vietnamese are neither'
Christians nor Communists. They
profess Buddhism, a faith as
dear to them as Christianity is to
Congressman Rivers. Where does
that put the American lawmaker
and his take-it or leave-it dic
tum?
In this super-charged atmos
phere, constructive and prayer
ful thought about the dreadful
possibility that the USSR will
succeed in'nudging us into a’war
with China falls a casualty. Fists
move into action before honor
able debate ends. Dissent is still
permitted; but who doubts that
it is so largely because highly
respected men like Senators Mc-
(jovern, Hatfield, and Cooper,
and experienced students of
world affairs like George Ken-
nan and Walter Lippmann have
had the courage to stand against
those who look upon our deep
involvement in Vietnam as the
inevitabre next step in our de
termination to conquer Commun
ism?
How can those who love all
mankind, this' idealistic Amer
ican people included, not be
moved by this appeal uttered by
Eugene Carson Blake, General
Secretary of the World Council
of Churches:
“But when the swamps of the
Mekong ( Delta are filled with
dead Vietnamese and when the
flower of our youth lies dead
with them, what victory will
have been won? Force cannot
obliterate ideas. The more force
we use, the weaker become our
best ideals! The picture of a great
and wealthy nation mobilizing
each month more and more of its
unparalleled technological might
to bring a tiny, long-suffering,
dark-skinned nation to capitula
tion means clearly that the more
we win the more we lose, and
each American soldier dead or
wounded is a useless sacrifice.”
In perhaps the most brilliant
analysis now available, David
Schoenbrun, who was at the Bat
tle of Dienbienphu, has made a
most intelligent appeal for the
United States to swap its role
from belligerent to interested
party, “One among many who
have an important stake m
peace in Asia.” His plea for a re
turn to the basic principle of the
Geneva Accords and for a her
culean attempt to quarantine
Vietnam off from world power
competition gives heart to those
who search for an honorable end
to the slaughter.
“The dogmas of the quiet past
are inadequate to the stormy
present.” (We are not fighting
with swords and muskets; we are
bombing from sky giants in the
presence of Armageddon.) “The
occasion is piled high with dif
ficulty, and we must rise—with
the occasion.” (Ho Chi Minh, if
not curbed, will impose his total
itarian steel will upon freedom-
loving Vietnamese to the South.
We must find a way other than
the use of military force to frus
trate this thrust) “As our case
is new, so we must think anew
and act anew.’.’* (We dare not risk
thermo-nuclear war, dare not be
responsible for the destruction of
our planet.) “We must disenthrall
ourselves, and then we shall save
our country.” (From this point
on, dedication to lasting peace
and not reliance on naked mil
itary power raised to the nth
degree, is our only hope for sur
vival and for the retention of our
good name for moral world
leadership.)
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Tues., Thurs., Sat. ’til 9 pjn.
"Sorry, we can't give any money, but we
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IN ATLANTA 4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU:
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2421 Piedmont Rd., N.E. 231-4444
4975 Roswell Rd. at Bfelle Isle 255-2922
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