CLASS! F1KT) I 11 3 t a,:-' N't" A;::m U.iy cor, red pa in j . Ja cl;;r n mm mm aTf WliLiLJiJLiLJLVO'iL ' KJ IL Vv- crt,i t;re- 4y n U 1 k lew .000 lie a Planned By BOB CHAPMAN DTH Staff Writer A new summer program now offers a student the opportunity to study at the of Oxford in University England for six weeks from June 30 to Aug. 18. Dr. Christopher Armitage of the UNC English Department said 50 students from the Asheville and Chapel Hill branches of the University can study one or two English literature courses or philosophy for six weeks, while living in Regents Park College, Oxford. WROUGHT IRON BOOEC SHELVES $6.99 OVAL BRAID RUGS 100 NYLON APPROX. WtfxWW Reg. $39.99 Now S25.00 CORDUROY Back Rests Asst. Colors Reg. NOW $7.88 S6.00 J. Z U THE 1 JEUER BEFOOE AT DISCOUNT x O: m. UjMI Ail The courses will be taught by UNC faculty with guest lectures from Oxford professors. Each course carries three semester hours of credit. Included in the curriculum are courses .in twentieth century' British poetry, O.H. Lawrence, philosophy of religion, social philosophy and Paul Tiilich. Dr. Armitage will instruct the course in British poetry. Dr. Ellis Shorb, head of the English Department in Asheville, will teach Lawrence, and Dr. James Stewart, head of the philosophy department in Asheville, will teach the three Automatic COFFEE rVlAICER 12-30 CUPS Reg. NOW $10.99 S7.77 Ladies' Double Knit 100 Polyester SHELLS Fashion Colors 1 CIO S2 WERSITY OPTICIAN! Paul MOORE & 96MJ0!G Prescription Filled Uami Duplicated SwnglaM Co.ifoct Units Acccuoric Visif Our Beautiful Location in DIG AL'S AT 2 3 3 UNDERGROUND ALBUMS INCLUDES: DVLflfJ: "S7EALI.T" "J0IH3 BSOGII SOCIETY Ton m BEATLES: it GET Ji JO; IL,!l If ( RoyV philosophy courses. Weekends are free for travel. London is an hour and a half from Oxford. Dr. Armitage pointed out. and Scotland and Wales are close enough to drive there for a weekend. I he cost of the summer is S650. which includes tuition, room and board for six weeks including the flights from Kennedy Airport to London and back. Dr. Armitage said the cost is cheap in comparison with other such programs. Berkeley's program, he said, cost twice the amount charged here. Application forms and further details about the program may be obtained from Dr. Armitage's office at 212 Bingham. A record number of 106 boys have been named winners of 1970 Morehead Awards to study at UNC. The announcement" is made by Hugh G. Chatham of Elkin, chairman of the Board of Trustees of the John Motley Morehead Foundation. The awards are for four years of study. Award winners from North Carolina high schools are: A lbemarle Ernest Alexander Whitley Jr.; Andrews Richard. Eston Blalock; Belhaven Hal Duane Tolan; Black Mountain William Michael Begley; Brevard Richard Samuel Daniels; Burlington William McKinley Mitchell III; Canton-Gary Wayne Bryant; Chapel Hill Peter Adams Barnes; Charlotte William Haywood cion University Square SPECIAL DACK" f r.r ; ' If' Ul i: u I o ) uJvA S inn rn n n n n r I UJ J iJ(CLn. MM S)lu. Roy Rogers Western Hamburger Platter Hamburger with French Fries & Cole Slav . - Roy Rogers Chuckwagon Chicken Platter 2 Pieces Roy Rogers Roast Beef, Combination Platter Roast Beef Sandvich, French Fries, Cole Slav rsr . 4 if wa Bobbitt III, Donnan Jr., Keesler . and Robert Calvin Lewis Brent Gerald William Harold McKnight. Columbus Tony W7aldrop; Davidson Robin F r ancis Rhodes; Drexel Thomas Gene Smith; Durham-Thomas Victor Morris, William Kenan Rand Jr. and Barry Hoyle Teasley; Elkin Walter Steven Jones; Fayetteville James Martin Chambo and Robert Wilkerson Suttles. G astonia John Darroch Cameron and John Klauminzer Molen; G o Id sboro William Alfred Walker; Greensboro James Dorman Compton III, Ernest Cobb McLean III and Lindsey Hughes Wrenn; High Point Scott Conrad Gayle and Larry Edward Robbins; Hobucken Timothy Gray If lUO A Norrhwtstcrn Mutual Life Ins. BSdj. .123 W .Fronfciin Sr. 5 r y ji if ! 113 Chicken, French Fries, Cole Slav, Rolls jjJ rded .More Carawan. Jacksonville Hugh King McGlaughon Jr.; Kings MountainJohn Anderson Ballew; Laurinburg John Franklin McNair IV; Manteo W7alter Etheridge Daniels; Monroe Ronald H enry Cox; Newland Jock Pike Ollis; Newport Larr Duane Eggert; Raleigh Gar land Coffield King; Roanoke Rapids Philip Carlton Williams. Robbinsville Joseph Dale Walsh; Rutherfordtorr James Christopher Callahan; Salisbury George Richard Whittecar Jr.; San ford Robert W7 i 1 1 i a m Patterson; Smithfield Harvey Craig Price; Southern Pines James Thomas Reilly Jr; Statesville David Hoyle Ogburn and Harold Lafayette Waters Jr. Thomasville James Franklin Gilliam; Troy Allen Wade Pridgen; Whiteville Robert Forrest Turner; W illiamston Joel .Taylor Thigpen; Wilson James Philmon Lamm; Winston Salem Harvey Leroy Kennedy, Gregory Howard Tuttle and Stephen Lee W7allenhaupt. Seven North Carolina boys who wrere nominated by preparatory schools received the coveted awards. They are William Montgomery Brown III of Charlotte, Robert Clarence Cone and David Schenck Jr. of Greensboro, James Parker Lumpkin II of Loaisburg, Cornelius Theodore Partrick Jr. of Washington, Robert Cummings Paschal of Raleigh and Thomas Comstock Seitz Jr. of Arden. Brown and Schenck are students at WToodberry Forest School in Woodberry Forest, Va.; Lumpkin and Partrick at Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg, Va.; Cone at Asheville School in Asheville; Raschal School in and Seitz Arden. Other winners at Lawrenceville Lawrenceville, N.J.; at Christ School in Morehead Award from preparatory schools are: Asheville School Melvin Arthur Dodd; Baylor School William Frazier Mat his and Albert Wright Wilson II; Choate School Frank Spruill Alexander and Robert Toombs CozartlH; Christ School Robert Marshall Campbell; Cranbrook - Jlllidi UiOJ" h mid i Ann ft I heads School Peter Ward Broer and Andrew Kenley Gordon; Culver Military Academy Rafael Francisco Coutin and William Joseph O'Brian III; Deer field Academy William LeRoy Duggan Jr. Episcopal High School Lee Massey McLaughlin Jr. ' and Stanley Tebbs Prewitt III. Gilman School Howard Baetjer Jr. and Bruce Alan Eisenberg; Groton School David Hans Erichsen and David William Moskowitz; Hill School Harold Gregory Moore III and Frank Frederick Reisner; Hotchkiss School Willis Kenneth Knodel Jr. and Lawson Reed Wulsin; Kent School John Edmund Dube and Talbott Miller. Lawrenceville School Kenneth Craven Hogate Murphy; Loomis School-David Walters Kohl and Donald Terhune Massey; McCallie SchoolJay Donald Bennett Jr. and Boyd Gunter Steward; Phillips Academy James Walter Stover and Frank Thomas Watk ins III; Phillips Exeter AcademyCal vin Loren Scovell III and Philip Jeffrey Zabriskie. St. Albans School Eli Whitney Debevoise and Ralph Henry Graves; St. Marks School Kendall Leighton Oei and Montagnie Van Norden Jr.; St. Paul's School Alexander Negus Breckinridge IV and John Jeffries Martin; Tabor Academy Robert Edward Leary and Robert Hiller Malm; Taft School Steven Jay Erlanger and Frederick Benton Deming Small; Westminster School Granville Bland Byrne III and Jimmy Tate Girardeau. Quiz Bowl Carolina Union Quiz Bowl teams from dormitories and fraternities, plus independent students, will compete in the premier round Monday, 'March 9, in room 202-204 of the Union. Union Recreation Committee members met Thursday night to decide Quiz Bowl offical rules. The Union-sponsored Quiz Bowl, designed to emulate television's "G.E. College Bowl," is a first at this University. Finals will be' held April 14 in the Great Hall.' .I jjjrj r n JI6 X t m Jk y i nners Three books pubu by the UNC Press hae been named winners in the 18ih annual Southern Books Competition for 1909, sponsored by the Sout?;tis!orn library Association. The UNC winners are n Ear in Bertram's Tree" by Jonathan Williams, The Fictional Children of Henry James" by Muriel G. Shine and "Theatre Double Came by Samuel Selden. All were designed by Mrs. Joyce Kachergis, design and production manager of the UNC Press. Two books designed by Mrs. Kachergis also were winners in the 196S Southern Books competition. They were "Book of Good Love" by Juan Ruiz and "The Greensboro Reader' edited by Robert Watson and Gibbons"Ruark. Thirty books published by 15 univeristy presses and four commerical presses were awarded prizes this year. AH books entered had to be published and printed or designed in the South and selection was based solely on typography, design and quality of production. Content was considered only insofar as the design aided in conveying the spirit of the book and the aims of the author. The winning books will be exhibited throughout the country with preference being given to requests from the South. Judges for the competition were Jack W. Stauffacher, chairman, proprietor of the Greenwood Press in San Francisco; Andrew Hoyem, book designer associated with the : Grabhorn-Hoyem Press; and Adrian Wrilson, a San Francisco book designer. Warren R. Howell, noted San Francisco bookseller, provided space for jury meetings. Female Lib. Betty Friedan, author of "The Feminine Mystique,' will speak at the Duke University Female Liberation symposium in Durham Friday, March 6. The symposium will be held March 5 and 6 in observance of International Women's Day March 8. Focus of the program will be women's problems in the contemporary world - and possible solutions to these problems. It will consist of films, panels, discussions and major addresses. p"i at Carolina i 2:15-4:30-6:45-9:00 NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS L I i MILTON'S SPRING SPANISH INVASION! Cortef iel docs it up tin ht with an inimita- A blc Norfolk suit, unlike to anytning you re seen. Let's start with the finest pima poplin, treat it with Zelan for good measure to make it a dual purpose rain suit presently in Ar mada gold or earth tan with deep Spanish brown, black, Biscay blue and Aegean green to follow. Finest tailor ing ever put into cot- $50.00 or the suit p: S75.00. Milton's got a spring ; in store for you like I you ve seen greater! never before - couldn't be A.' 9 ' , .rl. (Eupluuiri! ! I " ! ! n I m a V M ft ! i '. ' , I i lj i m p fit ' fl I I I Hi 4 J f Aon oino til. 1 1 f f t L