FBI Conducts Investigation of Series of Bombings of Jewish Homes in Kansas City WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Federal Bureau of Investigation has received information on anti- Jewish bombings in Kansas City, Mo., and is believed to be parti- cipating in an investigation launch- ed by Kansas City police. Kansas City police officials and announced that a pattern of anti- Jewish terrorism has emerged in Kansas City during the past seven months. Five bombings or attempt- ed bombings have occurred at the homes and businesses of Jewish persons, police said. The bombings were described as a "pattern" in- volving anti-Semitism. Police are now probing the lat- est blast which last week destroy- ed the interior of a restaurant owned by Melvin Rolsky. Rolsky is Jewish, and his name has figured in the news. The first of the five incidents in the anti-Jewish pattern occurred Jan. 26, when two unexploded dynamite bombs were found out- Israeli Motorists Steamed Up Over Anti-Smoke Law JERUSALEM — Where there's smoke, there's fire. The principle finds no exception in Israel, where regulations against excessive ve- hicle exhaust have been extended throughout the country after a year's trial in the three main cities. Trucking companies have threatened they will be unable to conform with the controver- sial rules, called the Banowitz regulations after the late Dr. Simon Kanowitz who piloted the bill through Parliament in 1961. The National Council for the Prevention of Air Pollution and Noise complained that the law has become a "mockery," with rules not being enforced and gaping loopholes available for drivers to circumvent them. Taxi drivers said they would strike unless the law is suspended or some concrete proposals made to help them elim- inate smoke from the exhausts of their vehicles. Los Angeles often has been con- sidered the smog city, but the problem of air pollution has be- come an increasing health hazard in Tel Aviv and other large Israeli ciities. side the homes of Irving Achten- berg, an attorney, and Dr. Lazare Shapiro, a physician. The names of both intended victims had ap- peared in newspaper publicity prior to the attempt. Two days later, an explosive charge was detonated against the wall of a discount store operated by proprietors of Jewish faith. The explosion resulted in damage esti- mated at $40,000. On April 21, the same store was damaged by still another blast. Police concluded that the only conceivable thread linking the bomibngs and attempt- ed bombings of Jews was anti- Semitism on the part of perpetra- tors. James Newman, chief of detec- tives of Kansas City Police De- partment, Tuesday denied a Washington report that a pattern of anti-Jewish terrorism has emerged in Kansas City during the past months, when five bombings or attempted bombings occured at the homes or businesses of Jewish persons. "We have no basic facts which connect these various bombings and attempted bombings one with another," he said. "There is no ap- parent pattern and any attempt to link them together is not based on the facts as we know them. There is no proven anti-Semitic as- pect, and some of the victims of recent similar bombings have been non-Jews." The Kansas City office of the Labor Committee Issues Pamphlet on Extremists Jewish Commodore Promoted TORONTO (JTA) — Air Com- modore Maurice Lipton of Sydney, Nova Scotia, has been promoted to Air Vice Marshall in the Royal Canadian Air Force and assigned to the Colorado Springs station of the North American Air Defense Command, it was announced here today. 'They poison the atmosphere. Every week more than 6,000 hate- peddling right-wing radio broad- casts are beamed into homes throughout the nation." The foregoing is a quote from the new pamphlet, "The Extremists," which is being distributed by the Jewish Labor Committee. The pam- Lake Superior is the largest phlet points out that right-wing ex- fresh water lake in the world. It tremists groups have an income of is 31,820 square miles in area and $25,000,000 a year and goes on to the greatest recorded depth is list such contributors as J. Howard 1,333 feet. Pew of Sun Oil ($1,055,000 )and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation ($665,000). Developed by the AFL-CIO Com- mittee on Political Education, the new pamphlet is being made avail- able by the Jewish Labor Commit- tee, 25 E. 78th Street, New York, free of charge as part of its effort to acquaint community leaders and concerned citizens with the facts about extremist activity. Federal Bureau of Investigation, while keeping close contact with the Police Department, also indi- cated that they had no evidence to substantiate a charge of auti- Semitic terrorism. They are con- tinuing to follow the bombing cases for any possible violation of Federal laws. Abe Kaplan, chairman of the Kansas City Jewish Community Relations Bureau, said: "Despite the various coincidences, the Po- lice Department has found no cir- cumstantial fact which would tie the several bombings together. There are many differences in the bombing techniques and differ- ences in the circumstances sur- rounding the bomb in gs raise questions not having to do with the Jewish factor, which the police are trying to resolve. The wicked say much but do "The distorted reports of terror- ism are unfounded and reports that little. — Baba Metzia 87. FBI is involved are equally un- founded. The Comunity Relations Bureau is in contact with the Po- lice Department and has confidence Sale or Lease that every resource is being used "Service Is Important" to solve these bombings and bomb scares." Best Location in Area . • '64 CHEVROLETS Best Deal All-Ways DEXTER DRIVING SCHOOL You Can Rely on Us For Quality and Lowest Rates CALL Dl 2-6955 SEE UN 4-2300 BR 2-2470 M. LARRY STERN AT Hanky Dawson Chevrolet, Inc. 14501 W. 7 Mile Rd., 1/2 block W. of James Couzens Services for Adolescents NEW YORK (JTA) -- Creation of a new division which will unite most of the present services to troubled adolescents provided now by the Jewish Board of Guardians was announced here by Solomon Litt, president of JBG. The new group, to be known as the Hawthorne-Youth Services Di- vision, will include the services of the Hawthorne Cedar Knolls School; the JBG's court services to Jewish children under the age of 19 who are brought before the City's Family Court or the Ado- lescent part of Criminal Court, the Court Clinic; after care services for children who graduated from (the agency's treatment center; and a group residence section for adolescents able to hold jobs or attend school, but in need of continued treatment and protective living environment. A Sons Confusions A Jew complained about his son-in-law: "He is no good, he doesn't know how to play cards, he doesn't know how to drink." "That's fine," said his listener. "What are you complaining of? I wish my son-in-law didn't know how to gamble and drink." "But," said the first Jew, "the trouble is that while my son- in-law doesn't know how to play cards, he plays cards, and al- though he doesn't know how to drink, he drinks." 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