Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 22, 1956 —Kansas, National News UN May Act In Middle East UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UP)—The United Nations Security Council will rush Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold back to the Middle East in an American-sponsored move to avert an Arab-Iraeli war, observers predicted today. The Hammarskjold mission, which had the backing of Britain and France, would have all the dramatic elements of his personal flight to Red China 14 months ago in which he on the release of 13 American fliers. In the past 24 hours, the Israeli Foreign Office demanded an emergency session of the Mixed Armistice Commission to investigate the injury of 11 Jewish farm hands in an explosion of a land mine in the Negev Desert near the Gaza Strip, and the charge that an Israeli force penetrated the truce line in the southeast corner of the Gaza Strip and engaged in a 70-minute exchange of gunfire with an Egyptian outpost. Six Dead In Texas Plane Disaster WACO. Tex. (UP)— A B-25 bomber crashed near Franklin, Tex. last night and two highway patrolmen said today that all six crew members were killed. The highway patrolmen radioed district patrol headquarters at Waco that none of the airmen survived the crash. The plane was from Connally Air Force base at Waco. Officials Speculate On Soviet Atom Tests WASHINGTON (UP)—Official sources speculated today that the new Soviet nuclear test means the Russians are going all-out to perfect atomic warheads for long-range ballistic missiles. Others said it proves the Russians have achieved "atomic plenty." They are now, one well-informed source said, building up a "whole family of atomic weapons" comparable in versatility to the larger U.S. nuclear arsenal. Ike May Visit Wisconsin WASHINGTON (UP)—The White House said yesterday it has no information on reports that President Eisenhower may decide to vacation in Wisconsin instead of Denver this summer. SHOP BROWN'S FIRST MEN! SOMETHING NEW HAS BEEN ADDED POWDER BLUE POWDER BLUE AND WHITE SINGLE BREASTED DINNER JACKETS IN OUR TUXEDO RENTALS DEPT. ALSO AVAILABLE— Shirts — Ties Studs — Links Sox — Oxfords Brown's TOGGERY 830 Mass. Richland Holdup Men Start Prison Terms LEAVENWORTH (UP)—Louis Dee Young, 25, Dallas, and James Arlington Debenham II, 24, Fort Worth, today began serving 20-year prison terms for their part in holding up the bank of Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark Gray, former U.S. Treasurer, at Richland, Kan. Mrs. Frankie Evelyn Fletcher, 27, of Dallas, an accomplice, will begin serving a five-year term at the U.S. women's prison at Alderson, W. Va., in a few days. VENTURA. Calif. (UP) — Police prevented H. Verlin Morris, 45, from applying for a ham radio station operator's license Wednesday. They said he stole the $10,000 worth of equipment he planned to use in setting up his amateur station. Ham Turns Out Bad Actor First Boycott Trial Due To End Today MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP)—The trial of the first of 90 Negro defendants accused of a conspiracy to boycott city buses was expected to end today with the defense insisting the 15-week-old demonstration resulted from mistreatment of the city's 50,000 Negroes. A parade of defense witnesses Wednesday testified that white bus drivers in Montgomery touched off the boycott that has crippled the city transit system by abusing Negro passengers, including even the pregnant and the blind. Turnpikes Cut Accidents MANHATTAN (UP)—Super highways with limited access, such as the Kansas turnpike now under construction, have only half the number of accidents of ordinary highways, a federal highway engineer said today. Controlled access, he said, was the "major feature distinguishing modern highways from those built in earlier periods." Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 6 a.m. — 10 p.m. Sunday Breakfast Served all day for your convenience. Top-notch foods to suit your taste when you stop by The Crystal Cafe 609 Vt. The earthworm plays a most important part in keeping the soil continually fertile. Modern methods can unload 14.- 000 tons of iron ore from a ship in less than three hours. THE LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK STORY Chapter Two When the milk is received, it's weighed, then cooled at 34°, then pumped into refrigerated storage tanks. Your milk is never again exposed to air impurities until you open the container in your home. 202 W. 6th VI 3-5511 ROCK CHALK REVUE March 23-24 Hoch Auditorium·8 p.m. ADMISSION 75c BETTER SEATS AVAILABLE FOR FRIDAY NIGHT