FIUDAYllAY' 9 r. .s-ai 3 .1 1 71 TIXS DAILY TAIl HEEL-- Sfc: PwlcCl dwell Wl Add 3 i rsss NEW YORK An atomie gun developed by the Army was des cribed yesterday as an accurate find devastating weapon, provid flcld commanders with tremend hm finger-tip fire power and heralding a new era in the wag ing of war; ' The description of this country's first atomic artillery weapon came from Army Secretary Frank Pace. Thq weapon can "hit its target under any weather condi tions and give ground troops the kind of devastating close support never before available in war fare, Pace declared. DTJRHAM-A 23-year-old Durham youth who has . a police record dating back to when he was 12 years old, was taken into custody here yesterday in con nection with the $50,000 robbery of the Leaksville bank on April 17. The youth is Wade Darnell Hamlin. SEOUL, Korea -Gen. James A. Van Fleet said yesterday he will use force if necessary to rescue Brig. Gen. Francis E. Dodd from the Communist prisoners of war who capteured the commandant at Koje Island Prison Camp. Meanwhile, Brig. Gen. Charles G. Colson of Charleston, S. C, was named the new commander of the camp. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. In the first move of its kind in legal history, Luis Kutner, a Chicago attorney, petitioned the United Nations yesterday for a writ oti habeas corpus to force the re lease of William N. Oatis from a Meeting Here Adult Education Confab To Open This Morning - One of the three principal speakers on the program of the annual spring conference of the Southeastern Adult Education Association, which opens at the University this afternoon, will be Dr. Howard Y. McClusky. Dr. McClusky, from the University of Michigan, is president of the national Adult Education Asso ciation. Dr. McClusky will speak at the final session Monday morning on "The Next Step." He will be in troduced by Dr. Clyde Erwin, state superintendent. Dr. N. T. Mitchell, associate editor, Greenville, S. C, News, and chairmon of the South Caro lina State Advisory Board of Adult Education, will discuss "What Are the Opportunities?" at the opening session at the Carolina Inn tonight. The third speaker, W. J. Mc Glothlin, consultant for prefes sional programs. Southern Re gional Education Board, Atlanta, also will speak tonight on the subject, "What Has Been Ac complished in the Field of Adult Education in the Southeast?" : Registration for the conference will be conducted between 1 p.m. and 8 p. m. today. Between 4 and 6 p. m. there will be tours of the campus conducted by student members of the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. Chancellor Robert B. House will extend a welcome at the Czechoslavak prison. Oatis is an opening session at 8 p. m., and Associated Press correspondent j Miss Marguerite Tolbert, Super visor of Adult Education, S. C. State Department of Education, Columbia, will preside. . Tomorrow morning there will be a general session featuring a forum on "Meeting the Chal lenge," with Dr. Gordon Black- who has been imprisoned by the Reds for more than a year. WASHINGTON Lawyers for both sides in the steel dispute Monday will argue the issue of ''inherent" residential rowers versus property rights before the well, Director of the University's Supreme Court. The court yes- Institute for Research in Social terday ' announced procedural , Science, as moderator, rules which will limit each side ' GrouP meetings will be held at to 2 and hours argument. various points on the campus ear- x ly tomorrow afternoon, and be ginning at 4 o'clock there will be WASHINGTON T h e Senate another general session at the Judiciary Committee yesterday inn, featuring a panel on "Under approved Federal Judge James' standing World Conflicts." f P. McGranery of Philadelphia for the post of attorney-general. The vote was 8-4. The appointment still must come before the full Senate where it will be fought by those in yesterday's minority vote, Sen Ferguson (R-Mich), said. ::::: 1M Mrtnftrfrt,yiftf Miss Schoeppc Off For Beach Weekend Miss Deenie (Brown Eyes) Schoeppe left town yesterday for a weekend at the beach. THIS IS as close as Sen. Esies Kefauver got io Sen. Dick Russell in this week's Florida primaries. The Tennesseean lost io the Georgia's Russell by some 30,000 votes. This shot was taken at a television interview. Slates la l!c Dr. Wallace E. Caldwell, chair man of the Department of His tory, will deliver the spring quar ter lecture in, the humanities Tuesday night in Gerrard Hall sJt 8:30 o'clock. His subject will be "The Ris and Fall of the Individual ia Classical Antiquity'- This is the third in the 1951-52 series of . lectures by members of humanities faculty in the University. 2 HEY J. Paul Slieedy Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Tesl . : V V) " K t c -:-:-.: . ir . i'-r:. y j?. Mother's Day Comes Hent Sunday! A Book Is A Lasting AduItSort 01 iff r "YOUR HAIR looks as though it's been in the rein, deer, a campus Caribou told Sheedjr. "If you want to horn in on the sororities, it might behoof a man of your elk . to try Wildroot Cream-Oil, America's Favorite Hair Tonic. Contains soothing Lanolin. Non-alcoholic. Grooms hair neatly and naturally all day long. Relieves annoying dryness. Removes moose, ugly dand ruff. Helps you pass the Finger-Nail Test!" Paul got Wildroot Cream-Oil and now no girl wonders whether he's man or moose! Kyour moose is cooked by unruly hair, collect a little doe and take a taxi-dermist to the nearest drug or toilet goods counter for a bottle or tube of Wildroot Cream-Oil. And ask for it on your hair at the barber shop so your deer won't think you've let herd down. (What she 11 say will be moose-ic to your ears!) of 131 So. Harris HillRd., Williamsville, N. Y. Wildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y. K mmmmm A If Isn't Fattening And -We'll Throw In The Fanciest Gift-Wrapping ".; ; In Town The Intimate Bookshop 205 E. Franklin St. Open Evenings SEOUL,; Korea Twelve fast Red jets swept down from the stratosnhere on eight rail-wrecking Allied F-80 Shooting Stars yesterday and one of the enemy was reported damaged in the en suing fight. Meanwhile, dead locked truce negotiators met for only 10 minutes over the 10 months old truce talks. WLL t l"5 V GONNA VJON'T B VOT1N' FDC J VYJ?ITE ;.'V 5- iS t 55 FAI TO FfeBCJPlTATe A M cuds, wrpoeos caaipazm lAiAAAGAJfr S MAP r fH&vtsf. TOM TAT 77XV & A GfOMP SWLL OP CWCW AGAWST 6MOW5 7K HE GOT UP TO SPZAK FOZ. TUZ CANP1PATB AN' GOT TAT&t liV777GG?f THAT r-iM.ff7ij'-ru' o n.c rs. rue '11 SB TOUGH aSCAUeg CaTANT! pcceF op orwzsz c&npipaT CmMmAU vw Witt Ara5B. AN' rAM fAv0 h. . . S YMff m COPBf. Chapel Hill Sfrofrion Given Rating Of 96 Chapel Hill's bus. station slipped four points from the previous month in its April sanitary rat ing but still pulled a 96 out of a possible 100. The State Utilities Commission yesterday said from Raleigh that the Trailways station here was j among 10 other cities getting the same rating. DAISY MAE I WANT A Y YES, SONNY, DEAR. AND TMEET MY MOTHER. TH "V NOW THAT I KNOW YOU'RE DEAR OLD SOUL. WAITS UP j 1 SAFE AT HOME, MAY I SEE J EV'RY NIGHT FOR HER J YOU ALXDKIE FOR OUST LITTLE BOY DONT ( A WEE MINUTE ? fr " " ' COUCH UP An EXTRA EUJCK FOR KEXIRIN'ME A HALF HOUR OVERTIME, CR I'U. TELL THAT DAMS YA NEVER I IAO A MOTHER.?, THIS ISTH OUCH.'J-LAST J TIME I HIRE S YOU, MOTHER MacCREEP7- VA BIN SMOKIN' MY CIGARS AGAIM.V A - y 'ctol r i r stm ak. - i i i MOTHER HAS f NOW VI RETIRED. SHE I I WARWT t SAID I SHOULD THET KISSYOUSE SWEET" ) GOOD-NIGHT 1 "Xf FOH .wvitwpu urnis Until S a nice cl-o

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