Paze 6 I IT TMT? n MTyTAR HEEL W'eihu-.vav. May 11. 1960 CHEAP CHEAP CHEAP! 171 y Brother Steal And I Sell It! 2J it, "GET IT" NOW AT THE ROYAL DUCK above Sutton's QOYflL BAD Behind the Post Office 157 929-4365 E. Rosemary V v - - - flit. mi-r: z) ilL j&Axik WE WILL BE OPEN OUR REGULAR SCHEDULE (11:30-9:30 Sun-Fri., 5:00-10:00 Sat.) ALL DURING EXAMS and COMMENCEMENT. FAREWELL SPECIALS Bacon Wrapped Chopped Sirloin Charcoaled to perfection Choice of 2 vegetables, hot rolls-butter, coffee or tea. $1.59 Celebrate with a choice STEAK U.S. Choice New York cut sirloin Baked Idaho Potato Sour cream, spring vegetable salad, hot rolls-butter, topped off with a mug of beer or glass of sparkling Burgundy 3.33 Don't forget our 3 different $1.25 specials daily HAPPENING CLOTHES AT THEIR IMAGINATIVE BEST2 With Milton's doing his own Tres Grande' shopping has never been more fun. Happy bells from soup to nuts beach bells, dressy bells lots of new additions from $8.00. Tres Grande six button double breasted sport jackets in lots of solids, checks' and stripes, from $75.00. Tres Grande suits in six or eight button double breasted in our different fabrics from $95.00. The greatest wide belt assortment for this great look from $7.00. New long Swiss cotton scarfs $5.00. New Johnston & Murphy shoes with unusual hardware from $42.50. tjoay snirts to set off your bells pressed fabric from $10.00. It's all happening at Milton's, so y'all come! Thomas Wolfe Award Winners Announced ; 1 ! in f : , I . . tT"y I I b i 1 1 i f ' I j I i 1 1 "UNC writers honored recently for outstanding work are Paulette Bates, who is in honors in creative writing here, and Max Steele, prize-winning author who is one of her instructors in the department here. Steele, Miss Bates Win Writing Awards Paulette Ann Bates of Greenville, S.C., a senior at the University of North Carolina here, has won first prize in Region III in the third annual Book-of-the Month Club Writing Fellowship competition. Miss Bates will receive a $3,000 grant at the awards presentation in June. She was selected from four semi-finalists in Region III, which includes Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia. She is one of 11 winners chosen in the seven competing regions. "The fellowship will allow me to write full time for a year an opportunity I've always wanted but thought I'd never have," Miss Bates said. "I'm very happy about it." The program is administered by the College English Association under a grant from the Book-of-the-Month Club. Used Quality Paperbacks- A board' of national judges consisting of Ralph Ellison, Louis Kronenberger and William Styron selected the winners from their submitted entries. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Bates of Rt. 9, Paris Mountain, Greenville,. S.C., Miss Bates is in English writing honors in the University. She plans to attend graduate school in creative writing. Awards for the Thomas Wolfe Creative Writing Contest were presented at the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity house Tuesday at 5:00 p.m. First place went to John Agar for his "The Missing Link." Agar received $1000 and a trophy for his story. Tom Lominac took second place with his story, "One Man Band." He won a $40 gift certificate from the Intimate Book Store. The third place award, a $25 gift certificate from the Hub Ltd., went to Richard Smith for "My Father's Pompano. Lee Baker won fourth place and a $15 gift certificate from Student Named To IP A Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson. Hart, a graduate student at UNC, has been named a member of the International Platform Association (IPA), a literary organization that promotes literature and education. Distinguished members of the IPA include former Presidents Lyndon Johnson, John Kennedy and Harry Truman. David Brinkly, Abigail Van Buren and Earl Wilson are members, and Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and William Jennings Bryan also belonged to the association. The main purpose of the IPA, Mrs. Hart said, is to improve the American Platform, especially in regard to assembly programs for school children. Wentworth and Sloan Jewelers for his story, "The Young Alchemist." Judges for the contest were Edwin Stirling, George Lensing, Daphne Athus, Wallace Kaufman and Tom Stumpf, all English professors at UNC. The Thomas Wolfe Creative Writing Contest is sponsored annually by Pi Kappa Phi fraternity in memory of the late novelist Thomas Wolfe, who was a student at UNC and' a member of Pi Kappa Phi from 1918 to 1920. Entries can 'be picked up in 115 Bingham Hall on Wednesday, May 14, and Thursday, May 15. )UDg Duo;40s uoiuf 4s I 04 4au 493J4S 31J4 SSOJDy S Chum, as you might have guess ed by now, we have used Quali ty Paperbacks running out of our ears. They aren't all dull and text-' like. THE GREAT GATSBY is a lively novel, and so is LOOK HOMEWARD ANGEL So are dozens of other books on the shelf. Here's a chance to set aside Some good summer reading at a merciful price. The Old Book Corner 137 A East Rosemary Street Chapel Hill Open 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Max Steele, noted novelist, short story writer and director of the University of North Carolina English Department's Creative Writing Program, has won his second O. Henry Award. His prize-winning story, "Color the Daydream Yellow," is included in Doubleday's Prize Stories 1969: The O. Henry Awards. The sensitive story of a young man's emotional conflict between the realities of his daydreams, experiences and memories, also appeared last fall in Quarterly Review of Literature. Steele, who has been called "one of the first top-level practitioners in short story form," has been published in The New Yorker, Esquire, Harpers, The Atlantic, Southwest Review and Mademoiselle. He is advisory editor to The Paris Review. He has published a short story collection, Where She Brushed Her Hair, and has written one novel, Debby, for which he won the Harper Brothers' $10,000 prize in 1950. Steele possesses "extraordinary skill as a story teller," according to his contemporary George Plimpton. "This skill is tempered with insight and perception and no small touch of daring as well a lively and enthralling combination." T. L. KEMP Jewelry l The Finest Selection of Diamonds in Chapel Hill 2 LOCATIONS 135 E. Franklin University Square m a perma- H M' . SttBSB'- I ' ' ' It ; rAi raw f What did yOU GOV about our ' 111 ' t)..v Mrs. Hart did her undergraduate work at Benedict College in Columbia, S.C., where she graduated magna cum laude. She has also studied at Seton Hall University in South Orange, N.J., and at the University of Missouri. She expects to receive her M.A. in English from UNC in June. Mrs. Hart currently resides in Columbia, S.C., where her husband teaches high school mathematics. of 01f?apel Sfartl? (Earnitua WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5-7 P.M. FEATURING O 1 lb. Squire Chopped Steak O Large Baked Potato O Squire Salad O French Garlic Bread O Cheese & Crackers ONLY $2.00 PLUS A FREE MUG OF DRAFT with each meal Dine in English atmosphere at the Country Squire Steakhouse 1V2 miles from Eastgate Shopping Center on 15-501 Blvd. I Se!d It In Tho Woitt-Ad G -COCA-COLA" AND -COE"AA MWSTtHeO TRADE -MARKS WHICH IOEMTIFT ONLY THE MOOUCT OF THE COCACOLA COMraNT' Just thai she's mad about the refreshing taste of Coca-Cola. It has the taste you never get tired of. That's why things go better with Coke, after Coke, after Coke, OOOIIAr.l G08A-G01A BOTTL!Q0J!!L mm) 1964 Comet Cyclone 2 dr. Ht. dark green, saddle interior, black vinyl top, 4 speed Hurst, 289, Mags, fiberglass hood, one owner, excellent throught. 933-1259, 968-5142. Available Sept. 1-12x60 1967 Mobile Home. Two bedrooms, study, fully furnished. Washer, dryer, and air conditioning. CaU Durham 489-4941. Furnitu.'e for sale. Stereo cabinet, bureau, desk. One year old and in perfect condition. Norman Rizk 929-4017. Air-conditioned, AM-FM radio, 1969 VW for sale. Rear speaker. Blue outside, white inside. Perfect condition. 11,000 miles. $1850. Some guarantee. Norman Rizk 929-4017. Going to Med School; Must sell: Triumph Herald 1965. 4-speed; 27mpg; new tires, brakes and tune; radio; excellent condition. $650. Call 942-3960 after 8. Sears Kenmore model 600, 18 month old automatic washing machine for sale: we are moving. 3-cycle, all white porcelain finish. $150. Call 929-6664. Must go: sofa, foamed, 3 foot-glass door book shelves, and T.V. set. Need to sell before exams. $50. Call 942-6056 after 6. Nikkorex-F 35mm. SLR camera body for sale. Focal Plane shutter. B-11000 sec. self-timer. Clip-on, cross coupled meter. Case. $65. Call 929-6664. : 400 Oldies but Goodies ; 1955-1968. 45rpm records. 3 '. for a dollar. About 13 the ; price you would have to pay i downtown. Jim Kuppers 968-9036. Sunbeam Alpine 1964, Excellent condition, red; New tune, only 30,000 miles. Call 942-3340 after 5:30 1968 Honda CL-90 Scrambler. 1,000 miles. Perfect condition. $250 or best offer Lloyd Clayton. 209 Carr Bldg. 968-9194. Alfa Romeo, 1960 Guil Sprint, new values, flywheel, 1300 cc engine phone 968-9094 Bill Russo. 15 inch GE protable black and white t.v. set excellent condition. A Bargain. 942-1478. 1968 Triumph GT-6. Red and Good Condition, 7000 miles. $2700 or best offer. Call 5:30-7:00 p.m. 942-5991. 1965 Volkswagen; excellent condition. Would cost $1200 from dealer. Yours for $900 or bsst offer. 929-1389, between 12-2 p.m. '61 Corvair. Motor in good condition. Tires and Brakes excellent. Seat covers and Radio. 942-2008. Volvo 1800S, excellent condition. $3400 dark green with tan interior R.G. Steele. 834-8154 Raleigh. Town and Apartments, summer September Campus Garden Now leasing for sessions and semester. Three minutes from Chapel Hill, 15-501 and Garrett Road. All G.E. Appliances, air conditioned, electric furnace, garbage disposal, stove, refrigerator, swimming pool, laundromat. Call Resident Manager, 489-0600, Durham. House for summer rent $125 a moE,jhfto 5pple, 5 beCsaifs, Or cdhdlionine. furnjsJkM Ba!L I9f9-5153. Anytime. North Hampton Plaza Apt. to sublet June 1 to Sept. 1. Furnished Aircondition. Rent $125 mo. Call 929-4635 after 6 p.m. 1962 Black VW 45,000 miles $600. cash call 929-3384. Sublease June-August: Camelot Apartment 1 bedroom furnished, air conditioned, pooL Phone 942-6028. Hot and bothered? Live in Air conditioned, poolside comfort at University Gardens. Furnished, 2-bedroom apartment to sublet to males for summer with option for next year. $33 a month. Walking distance. Call 929-6474. For Rent to married couple. 45x12 custom Mobile Home in forest setting with pasture, ten minutes from campus. Prefer long term lease. 929-1487. For details. Male student to sublet 2 bedroom for summer. $69 month without utils. To share starting Sept. $80 month with utils. 942-2981 after 2 p.m. For Rent: 2 bedroom, air conditioned mobile home, available June 1. Call 929-2854 or 942-1749. Old Sports Car any modeL Motor and transmission good. $200-$300. 929-2340. Modern, Fully furnished Apartment. June-Aug., for 2. Carrboro. air-conditioned and pooL Call 942-4272. Live in the Sigma Chi house this summer. Cheaper than dorms! Ice, Color T.V., Party Facilities, Convenient Location. Contact: Steve Smith or George Lennon-968-9136. Roommates for spacious Apartment in University Gardens. 2 Bedrooms, large living room, and kitchen, dinette, bath. Air conditioned, swimming PooL 39month. 929-2362. Male help wanted: 5:30 a.m. to 7 a.m. Approximately S100 per month. Car necessary. Call 942-5953, 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wanted: 2 males to share Apartment in University Gardens for summer. $35month. Call 933-3554 or 933-3489. Poetry Wanted for cooperative . poetry anthology. Please include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Send to Idlewild Press, 543 Frederick, San Francisco, California. 91117.