Newspaper Page Text
Six
THK SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, Dm. 15, 1967
AS WE WERE SAYING
By Robert Segal
' ."V v»r. i
(A Seven Arts Feature)
A nation of jodnens, we have
ootne to the point where we can
enroll with ithe National Commit
tee For Responsible Patriotism
or with a new body simply call
ed Resist.
The former body picks up
where the New York parade of
May 13 left off-^the parade to
support our boys in Vietnam.
The most recent account we saw
of it noted that nine governors
had endorsed it; and parades
were planned in 100 cades in all
50 states. “We don’t care why
we’re in Vietnam,” the body’s
executive director, Charles W.
Wiley, said recently, “but when!
Americans in uniform are getting
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF SAID COUNTY:
The petition of SAMUEL L. EPLAN,
PHILLIP L. YOUNG, and MYRA E.
SNOW, all of 1013 Wllllam-OIiver
Building, Atlanta, Georgia respectfully
shows:
1.
The petitioners desire to obtain a
Charter for a private corporation
under the name of:
K-B-M DATA SYSTEM*, INC.
for a period of thirty-five (35) years
with the privilege of renewing at the
expiration of that time.
2.
The general nature of the business
to be conducted is that of rendering
electronic data processing services, to
such individuals, partnerships, or corp
orations that may desire said serv
ices and employ the corporation to
perform same, both in the production
and computer application of said pro
cessing as it relates to any and all
types of business and industry; to ren
der such service as training and ren
dering educational development of
such individuals desiring same in
which said date processing machines
and systems are used for that purp
ose; to render all types and kinds of
services in the same or kindred fields
of those as set out herein: to mort
gage, lease and deal in real and per
sonal properties of all kinds; to buy,
sell and own shares of stock or bonds
of other corporations as its Board of
Directors may determine;—to—hnirmy
and loan monies for such purposes as
may be necessary in the operation of
said business; to act as Trustee of
Escrow Agent under such terms and
conditions as may be determined by
its Board of Directors and to have
such other and further rights and
powers and to enjoy all of the privi
leges enumerated in Paragraphs 22-
1827, and Paragraph 22-1370, of the
Code of the State of Georgia, and all
other powers and privileges enumerat
ed therein and any amendment to said
Chapter which may have been made
or which may be made in the future
are hereby made a part hereto in the
same extent as if same were incorp
orated herein.
3.
The amount of capital which the
corporation shall begin business with
shall be a minimum of One Thou
sand ($1,000.00) Dollars, with the priv
ilege of increasing its capital stock
to the sum of One Hundred Thousand
($100,000.00) Dollars.
4.
Petitioners desire the to Increase or
decrease stock within the authorized
limits by vote of the majority of the
outstanding common stock and to have
the further right to issue fractional
shares of stock.
5.
The principal office of the corpora
tion is to be located in the County
of Fulton, State of Georgia, but pe
titioners desire the privilege of es
tablishing branch offices and places
of business elsewhere.
WHEREFORE, petitioners pray an
order be granted incorporating them,
their associates, successors, and as
signs, under the name aforesaid with
the powers and privileges herein pray
ed for, together with such other pow
ers and privileges as may be neces
sary, proper or incident to the con
duct of the business for which peti
tioners arc seeking incorporation, and
as may be allowed to private corp
orations under the terms of the Act
of January 28th, 1938, authorizing the
Charter of corporations.
ORDER
The foregoing petition of SAMUEL
L. EPLAN, PHILIP L. YOUNG, and
MYRA E. SNOW to obtain a Charter
for a private corporation under the
name of
K-B-M DATA SYSTEMS, INC.
having been presented to the Court
and the same having been examined
and it appearing to the undersigned
Judge of said Court that the applica
tion Is legitimately within the purview
and intention of the laws of this State,
and it further appearing by certifi
cate of the Secretary of 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 THEREFORE ORDERED AND
ADJUDGED that said application be
and It Is granted, and said applicants,
their associate*, successors and assigns
are hereby incorporated as prayed In
said petition and a Charter is granted
unto K-B-M DATA SYSTEMS, INC.,
with all rifhta, powers, privileges and
Immunities as prayed In said applica
tion and as authorised by the laws of
this State.
Dated this the II day of Novem
her, 1967.
JACK ETHRIDGE
JUDGE, S. C. A. C.
Dec.1A.l542
Right to Dissent
shot at, we’ve got to support
them."
The outfit calling itself Resist,
on the other hand, contends that
our involvement in Vietnam is
unconstitutional, illegal, violative
of international agreements, a
denial of religious liberty and of
the equal protection of the laws
governing the draft. This organ
ization’s call is “to Resist Illeg
itimate Authority,”
Between these extremes, Amer
ican opinion regarding our heart
break excursion on to the quick
sands of Vietnam appears to be
shifting rapidly. The magazine,
Time, perhaps came as dose to
reality as any organ when, in
ndting that a Louis Harris poll
showed a decline from 72% to
61% in American support for the
war in just two months, it said:
“Between Independence Day and
Labor Day, a profound malaise
has gripped the American peo
ple.”
Testimony to (that malaise is
etched on every page of the book,
“Vietnam: Crisis of Conscience”
by Rabbi Abraham J. Heschel,
Robert McAfee Brown, and Mi
chael Novak. How any moral and
patriotic American can read the
facts and opinions there sett forth
and continue convinced that we
must stumble on to greater arms
escalation and greater bloodshed
in Vietnam is hard to conceive.
However honorable our original
intentions, we are now.' sacrificing
hundreds of our own young men,
partly because our false pride is
strangling our wisdom and our
capacity to be merciful.
In this, “war without front
lines and without armies in uni
form,” in this land war in Asia
against which General MacArthur
so vigorously warned us, in this
war into which we blundered,
we are sowing new seeds of racial
~nm cat—and- tempting the fates
that have power to pull the
strings of nuclear destruction.
This is a war that began as a
civil war in the South of Vietnam
and not (as some now would like
us to believe) as Communist ag
gression from tbe North. It is a
war that has brought out the
worst in sloganeering, as exempli
fied by Congressman L. Mendel
Rivers’s assertion that “We should
flatten Hanoi and let world opin
ion go fly a kite” and by the sad
line from the military hero who
wants to be President, General
Curtis E. Le May: “We should
bomb Hanoi back into the Stone
Age.”
Not the least of the casualties
in this war is the long-valued,
complete right to dissent. As soon
as this issue is raised, those who
believe that mute obedience to
the demands of the military is
the top law of the land feverish
ly demand proof. And as fast as
proof is presented, members of
the cult of escaJarien insist that
these are only minlr infractions.
Harold Pinter, the English
playwright, may be painfully
correct when he says: “The
Americans should not have gone
in, but they did. They should now
get out, but they wonU.”
Why, then, can we not muster
enough opinion to make the move
we must make to save lives and
to regain our souls?
“Since all the world knows that
the United States has the power
to raze every tree in Vietnam if
we wish to do so, it will hardly
count against us if we decide not
to destroy what we could so
easily destroy,” Novak argues in
the section he has written for
“Crisis Of Conscience.” And he
adds: “Every single day of des
truction and bloodshed makes the
future rebirth of the country so
much more difficult and improb
able. The course we have chosen,
a course of total militarization,
destroys everything: the land
scape, the people, the hopes for
the future, the possibilities of
any but a craven capitulation
from others, and all pride in our
selves. When one has chosen a
wrong course . . . the only rem
edy is to change one’s course.”
The ways for change have been
dearly indicated. The will of tbe
American people eventually will
effect that change. But how late
—how tragically late!
HQ of Israel AJC
Moving to Jerusalem
SAN FRANCISCO (JTA)—The
American Jewish Committee an
nounced here, as its national ex
ecutive board dosed its western
regional conference, that it will
move its Israel headquarters from
Tel Aviv to Jerusalem “to help
foster personal contact and inter
group relations between Isradis
and Arabs in Jerusalem.” The
announcement was made by
Judge Theodore Tanenwald Jr.,
chairman of the organization’s
committee on Israel.
Declaring that Jerusalem is not
only the spiritual and cultural
center of Israel but also repres
entative of the country’s center
’“where the action is,” Judge
Tanenwald said the AJC is “par
ticularly concerned with the in
tergroup aspects of face-to-face
meetings of Israelis and Arabs in
Jerusalem, since the old and new
sectors were unified under Is
rael’s jurisdiction in the wake
of the June war.’
DAym
BY HENRY LEONARD
"What you say about me, Molly, hurts so much
... It must be true. Thank you ever so much for
^you^criticismT^
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