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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
Friday, Feb. 14, 1969
P*0« Two
Teenagers
But ‘Love’
By BEN GALLOB
Oppose Intermarriage
Poses Challenge
Most New York City Jewish
teenagers polled in a recent re
search study expressed varying
degrees of opposition to the idea
of marrying outside their faith
but the adolescents indicated
they felt less strongly on the
matter when the issue of roman
tic love was posed to them.
Another phase of the research
Study which sought information
from New York City Jewish col
lege students, disclosed “an
alarming trend in the rate of in
termarriage” on the basis of the
occurrence of such marriages re
ported by the students in their
own families, aocording to Dr.
Victor D. Sanua, associate pro
fessor at the Wurzweiler school
of social work at Yeshiva Uni
versity, He reported on the
results of his study at the third
conference on intermar r i a g e
sponsored by the Commission on
Synagogue Relations of the Fed
eration of Jewish Philanthropies
of New York. Co-sponsored by
the Westchester Board of Rabbis,
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OK GEORGIA
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SAID COUNTY:
The PetlUon of NORMAN S. BASS,
STANLEY L. FISCHMAN and SAM
UEL APPEL, each of whose post of
fice address Is 90 Falrlie Street, N. W.,
Atlanta, Georgia, respectively shows:
1.
That they desire for themselves,
their associates, successors and as
signs, to be incorporated under the
name and style of "TEAM ASSOCI
ATES, INC." for a term of thirty-five
years with privilege of extension or
renewal as by law provided.
2.
That 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 is
pecuniary gain and profit.
The general nature of the business
to be conducted by the Corporation
shall be the purchasing, manufacture
and selling of women’s and men's
wearing apparel, accessories and re
lated merchandise of every kind, na
ture and description, both at whole
sale and retail, and the representa
tion of manufacturers for such pur
poses, and to do any and all things
necessary or incident thereto. The
Corporation shall be further empow
ered to engage in any other type of
business or do any act not prohibited
by law, which a majority of its Board
of Directors may deem appropriate
and desirable.
5.
The authorized capital of the Corp
oration shall be $50,000.00 which shall
be divided into 1,000 shares at $50.00
par value, common stock.
' 6.
The amount of capital with which
this Corporation shall begin business
shall not be less than $200.00 and all
the capital shall be paid into the
corporation in money, property or a
combination of the two.
7.
The Corporation shall have the right
to acquire real and personal property
and pay for same in cash, stocks, or
bonds of this Corporation or other
wise, as well as to acquire the good
will, rights, assets and profits, and
to undertake or assume in whole or
any part thereof, the obligations or
liabilities of any person, firm, associ
ation or corporation.
8.
Said Corporation shall have the
right to lssuq negotiable instruments,
bonds, mortgages, deeds to secure
debt, and other indentures for the
purpose of securing any obligation of
said Corporation. The Corporation shall
also have the right and power to
guarantee the payment of indebtedness
of others as guarantor, surety, en
dorser or otherwise, whether or not
such indebtedness relates to the prin
cipal business engaged in by the Corp
oration.
9.
Said Corporation shall be authorized
to issue stock for any consideration,
either money, property or services, or
any combination thereof, which Is at
least equivalent to the full par value
of the stock so to be issued. The
valuation of any property or services
for such purpose will be fixed by the
directors of the Corporation and such
method of valuation will he conclus
ive.
1(1.
Said Corporation shall have the
right and power to adopt and use
trade names, trade marks, and to en
gage in business under trade names.
11.
Said Corporation shall have the
power to include in Its bylaws any
regulatory or restrictive provisions
relating to the proposed sale, transfer
and other disposition of anv of its
stock by any of its stockholders.
12.
Said Corporation shall have the
right and power to amend, alter,
change or repeal any provision of this
Charier In form or substance tlpoh the
vote of a majority of its outstanding
common stock, and all rights conferred
upon stockholders, directors and of
the conference was hold at the
Community Synagogue in Rye.
The adol eiscents included
members of Zionist youth groups,
boy and girl students at a public
high school, pupils at an Orth
odox day school and at a Jewish
afternoon school, at a Reform
school and members of Jewish
community centers. The students
were among those attending a
New York City municipal col
lege, Yeshiva University and
Stem College for Women of
Yeshiva University.
The respondents filled out a
75-item questionnaire on Jewish
identification, which included a
number of propositions about in
termarriage. They were asked to
react to such propositions as “the
only solution to the Jewish prob
lem is intermarriage” and “inter
marriage is bad for the Jewish
fleers herein are granted subject to
this reservation.
13.
Petitioners desire that the said
Corporation shall have and enjoy all
the privileges, rights, and powers
enumerated In Chapter 22-18 of the
Corporation Act of 1938 of the Code
of Georgia, and as the same may be
hereinafter amended, and all of the
powers and privileges enumerated
therein are made a part hereof to tho
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 all the powers and privileges as
may be necessary and proper or in
cident to the conduct of the business
for which petitioners are seeking In
corporation and as may be allowed
by law for private corporation.
DUNAWAY, SHELFER,
HAAS & NEWBERRY
By: Samuel Appel
Attorneys for Petitioners
Fifth Floor
90 Falrlie Street, N. W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
Telephone: 521-1151.
* ORDER
The foregoing application and peti
tion for Charter having been pres
ented, examined and found to be
legitimately within the purview and
Intention of the laws of this State,
and there having been presented a
certificate from the Secretary of
State declaring
“TEAM ASSOCIATES, INC."
not to be the name of any other now
existing corporation registered in the
records of the Secretary of State, said
application is granted, and
"TEAM ASSOCIATES, INC."
hereby Is Incorporated In accordance
with the laws and the prayers of the
above petition.
This 16th day of January, 1969
JEPTHA C. TANKSLEY
JUDGE, ATLANTA
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
Jan.24,31,Feb.7,14
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people” and “generally speaking,
it is not wise for a Jew to marry
a Gentile.”
The proposition which brought
dilutions in the general opposi
tion to intermarriage was “a
Jewish young man who really
loves a Gentile girl should give
up his Jewfehness if that were
the ,only way he could marry
her.” Response categories were:
strongly disagree, uncer tain,
agree, strongly agree.
A summary of the teenage
responses indicated that the
strongesf'opposition to pro-inter
marriage positions was voiced by
the all-day school students, fol
lowed by the afternoon school
students, then the Jewish center
group. The public high school
respondents appeared to be the
least concerned about maintain
ing their Jewish identity through
rejection of non-Jewish mates,
closely followed by the Reform
school pupils.
This general pattern of opposi
tion to intermarriage weakened
when the research subjects con
sidered the proposition that a
Jewish boy should give up his
Jewishness to get the Gentile girl
he loved. At this romantic age.
Dr. Sanua reported, many more
adolescents, particularly members
of one of the Zionist youth
groups, the afternoon Jewish
school, the all-day school and the
public school groups “would be
willing to give up their faith in
order to marry the person they
love” but the teenagers also in
dicated ambivalance and sex dif
ferences.
For example, 64 percent of day
school boys rejected intermarri
age as the “solution” to the
“Jewish problem,” while 98 per
cent of the day school girls re
jected the idea. The percentage
of day school boys and girls re
jecting love as a reason for inter
marriage was smaller than for
the “solution” proposal but it
dropped more for the boys—50
percent rejecting love as a rea
son for marrying a non-Jew —
than girls, of whom 73 percent
took such an opposition stand.
For this college student sub
jects, Dr. Sanua reported on
responses to questions about
practices, rather than attitudes.
The students were asked whether
any member of the family was
married to a non-Jew.
The rate of such marriages
among the students’ closer rel
atives, such as brothers, sisters,
uncles and aunts, was found to
be 16 percent—35 out of 220 col
lege student subjects. Dr. Sanua
said he did not consider the sam
ples in his study representative
of the total Jewish population in
the New York metropolitan area
but asserted that the percentage
he found did show “an alarming
trend in the rate of intermarri
age among Jews.”
He declared also that the find
ings indicated that families which
sent their children to Jewish re
ligious colleges “are not immune
to incidents of intermarriage in
their immediate families,” adding
that this finding was affirmed by
“the similar percentages obtain
ed by the secular and religious
college students.”
Despite this, he added, “the
fact still remains that Jewish col
lege students, compared with the
college population at large, re
main the group most reluctant
to marry outside their religion.”
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to see and drive the in
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Lester Pazol
Sales Representative
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