m
; The Canadian Jewish News, Friday, Januaiy 13, 1967 -'Page 3
rmaii<
Duesseldorf, (JCNS) - The Westphalia Would not be in^
judiciary in the We^t German State of North Rhine-
active if material which incited hatred against the
CRUISES -CRUISES
Planning! a Trip
Call Murray Helfett or Allan ;Webber-^ for Information and reservations on air and wa travel, hotels, resorts, cruises and tours.
Let Dominion take the trouble out of trav*ll
DOIVIINION
TIUVWL OMIOB LTP. IS ^VELUNQTON ST. W., TORONTO IM. 4.7JW
With oochyeor this delightful kind of holiday is becoming more and more pbp.u-. lor. We now have the full Winter iche-dule of all steamship lines and the berthing books are : open. Do call us and Vfo will be hdp- ' py to send you ful I details.
SHALOM - SHALOM
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Purim - Carnival Cruise, March 1 (37 days)
Passover - Festival Cruise, April 7 (42 days)
Rosh Hashano - Holy Day Cruise, Sept. 11 (43 doys) BOOK EARLY FOR CHOICE SPACE.
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(CANADIAN)
TO
ISRAEL
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$462.00 FROM TORONTO
I Price Includes Round Trip Air
I Fare Via New York and is
I Valid for a 9 Day Stay in IsraeL I
IpLANNED GROUP DEPARTURES: I 1 JAN. 15; 21; 22; 24; 28; 29; 31 IfEB.4; 5; d; 11|12:13; 14;]8;19:20:2^ |MAR: 4; 5; 6; 11; 12; 13; 14; 15; 19; 20; 21; 22
I Ypii will prgbably wa^^ I Information on this I Please Call Your Travel Agent
i
if
Jews was published, Dri Josef Neuberger, newly appointed Jewish Minister of Justice, said here last week;
In the Minister's view, soiTie extremist publications had overstepped the limits of legality and there would be closeij supervision iri the future.
He revealed that he had
III Wariiinii
asked the Duesseldorf public a«a»pst prosecutor to Inguire whether two Ibcaily sold Ibng-playipg i*e<!ords, containing Nazi news^casts and orders of the day, were giorifyii* Nazism.
Dr. Neuberger also. announced that the Statei judiciary would settle soquicJdy as possible proceedings
Nazi criminals. About 10,QjB,Osusj^cts Were under iiive^tigation.
The central Dortmund agency fo^'the investigation of Nazi crime was conducting inquiries intothe activities of about 8,500 persons suspected of Nazi murders abirodd and another 1,000 were under investigation by the Cologne agency
is
in respect of crimes in concentration CampSi
Between the end of the war and trie beginning of 1965, there had been legal proceedings in the State against 10,304 persons. Of these,. 2,122 had been sentenced. Proceedings were chrppped against the remainder because of insufficient evidence.
REFUSE TO PROSECUTE
VIALON
■Bonn, (JCNS) - There can be no decision whether to prosecute, . Professor Dr. Friedrich Karl Vialon, former State Secretary at the Ministry of> Economic Co-
operation, until the public prosecutors in Coblenz and Bonn had ended their Inquiries into his wartime activities.
This is the West German Government's reply to a
question by the Social Democratic Pairty which also inquired whether it was true that Vialon had been responsible for the seizure and dis-posal.of Jewish property and
HUMAN REbATI0IIS^^^^^^*iii^^5^
THE 18 YEAR OLDDAUGHUR
DB. ROSE N. FRANZBUU
Question: We have an 18-year-old daughter who is attractive, intelligent and very good company with her friends. At home she withdraws to her room, is angry when we come in to see her and does not communicate much with us. She claims we have nothing in common with her.
We would like to enjoy a better relationship with her, but cannot seem to reach her. We are kind, pleasant and, we believe, understanding parents. We tiiink we do our best but to no avail.
She is attending college where she is doing very well, and has begun to see a young man quite steadily.
We have a younger girl who is lovable, kind a^ easy to live with. Why the difference??
Answer: At home, a youngster will express feelings about herself and fears about the future that she finds it hard or impossible to keep within herself or to live with. There, she can even take the chance <rf letting them come out in unacceptable or provocative behavior.
Every youngster, while wanting and needing to grow up and away from the family, still feels somewhat guilty for wanting to leave the people who did so much for her.
It makes it easier for the children to leave if they become hostile and critical of the family. By rebellious acts and misconduct, they ask for punishment. They then use the punishment to justify their behavior.
It is wrong to leave a good and loving pjEUTeh^^ but it becomes right to want to 1 leave apparent who is mean. In the hostility against the parent, there is also a con^ r tributing element of guilt and anger with themselves for still wanting tbUfeevecyr, thing that the parents have to give, while diverting all their feelings of. love and affection to people on the outside.
By a withdrawal to her Qwn lair, an adolescent girl tells her family that she wants her privacy respectedj just as she was once taught to stay out (rf her parents' room and to respect their privacy. In a sense, too, this is a form of testing.
Tlie young person wants to find out whether her parents practice what they preach and whether what they have taught her will really make her more attractive and desirable to others.
Sometimes the older child waits for the time when she is stronger and more independent to get even with the parents for having favored a younger sibling and for having put her, the firstborn, into second place. By her hostile behavior, she now tells theih how rejected this made her feel. She withdraws, challenging themtopursue or woo her, and thus affirm how much she is really loved and wanted.-
But a parent who wants the child to return to a loving home relaticmshlp on an adult leyel cannot compete with her daughter's friends as if they were all siblings fighting for the child's attention. Neither may a father regardjiis dauber's bory friends as rival suitors. This in itself . is enough to make the youngster withdraw and stop communicating with her parents.
Your aj^roval of your daughter's friends and activities will put her less on the defensive, and will then make her behave less offensively to you. She expresses her guilt by acting hurt and showinghostilitytoyou. Instead of showing your hurt through recrimination, resume communication with her, telling her about whaityou are doing »and enjoying. /•..•: < .^A
When she is ma^e to'feej^hat what sh« : does brli^.j^ai^^€^j^/^\
her parents, she Will behave .like the attractive, intelligent human belrig shi^ is at home, too. i
labor in Western Russia during the war.
Vialon, who was in charge-of the financial department of ■■ the Nazi Commissioner's headquarters in Riga between 1942 and 1944, retired prematurely ^ when the new West German Government of Herr Kiesinger was formed last mmth.
The Hagen public prosecutor has appealed against .the verdict rf a war crimes trial last month, in which five former members (rf tho staff of the Nazi concentration camp at Sobibor, near Lublin, Poland, were acquitted and six others jailtid.
One was sentenced to life imprisonment, five to terms of between eight and three years.
THE SUNLIT SEA AND SANDY BEACH OF MIAMI.-A solitary bother finds
the right spot - in January.
Hebrew paper read in Russia
New York, - (JCNS) "Kol Ha* am," the Israeli Communist Party daily, is helping to apread the Hebrew language in the Soviet Union thanks to a subsidy from Brit Ivrit Olamit, (Hebrew World Movement), Dr. Arieh Tartakower, the chairman of the organization and the head of the World Jewish Congress' Israeli branch.
The movement, he said, had been able to penetrate Iron Curtain countries. He disclosed that he met recently Mr. Moshe Sneh, the editor of "Kol Ha'am" and made a deal with the paper to propagate Hebrew in the Soviet Union. The paper was being sold there in thousands of c(^ies, he added.
When asked how much money he had given, Mr. Tartakower replied: "Not very^gi^cl^ihow much does
it cost to prhit extra copies?" The deal was used to illustrate how tne movement works even "in the most unbelievd)le places".
Mr. Tartakower also said that during a recent conversation with, the Sviet Ambassador to Israel, he aSked if Moscow would allow the establishment, of Hebrew schools there. The Ambassador had assured him. Dr. Tartakower said, that the Soviet authorities would make no difficulties if the initiative camefrom Russian Jews themselves and not from abroad.
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For a dentonstration drive in Cadillac, Buick, Pontiac, Acadian or Vauxhall, call Elly Rotenberg. He'll bring one to your door, if you like. And remember this: Elly stands ready to prove Addison's on Bay .can.sell you a 1967 Pontiac for less than any other dealer.
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TO ATTRACT THE YOUNG TO ISRAEL
London, (JCNS)-ElAlrepresentatives from Western and Northern Europe held meetings in Lond<Mi last week with Mr. Moshe Caime.l, Is-, raeli Minister o£ Transport, and M. Ben-Ari, the airline's commercial vice-president.
The object of the meeting was to formulate plans to build «q) tourist traffic to Israel from Europe.
Mr. Carmel said that Israel particularly was anxious to increase incentive tours for employees In factories and industry, and also affinity tours by professional and other groups.
From next October special cheap rates will be crffered to such groups for the winter period - these provide for a maximum stay of seven nights and a minimum stay of three ni^ts.
Specidl efforts also will be made to attract pilgrims and young people from Europe for holidays oh kibbutzim. A big promotion campaign will.be undertaken to emphasise Israel's attractions as a tourist center.
Mr. carmel said that important new plans had been prepared for Israeli airports to cope with the increased traffic e)q)ectedinthe superr sonic age. This would pro- . vide, inter alia, for a new international runway longer than the one at present in use. Because of the noise problem, it would bejsitu ated in the undeveloped area between Bat Yam, Hbloii and Richon-le-ZIoh. /
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