Tuesday. January 15. 1974
Th Daily Tar Heel
Sailing
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sets voyage
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Pass-fail deadline set I M&ElMewiCZ
to
nCM
The UNC Sailing Club will sponsor a trip
to the Bahamas during spring break. March
7-16. Included in the trip will be seven days
aboard a 65-foot sailing ketch which will
cruise through the Bahamas with extended
stays in Bimini and Nassau. Sailing,
navigational instruction and transportation
to Miami and back are also included. Total
cost is $225. There will-be a limited crew of
only 22 people.
Additional information may be obtained
by contacting Mary Gaddy, 5I7 Granville
East. 933-1826. or Bob Rice, JGI-ASueAnn
Court. 942-5056.
Talk on epilepsy
slated by doctor
Dr. James Schimschock will discuss
preschool training for handicapped children
at 3 p.m. Thursday.
Schimschock will speak on "A Model
Program for Training Preschool Children
with Epilepsy and other Neurological
Disorders" at the Frank Porter Graham
Child Development Center (FPG).
Schimschock directs the children's clinic
of the Good Samaritan Hospital and
Medical Center in Portland, Ore.
FPG is located on N.C. 54 Bypass next to
Frank Porter Graham Elementary School.
The presentation is open to the public and
free.
Students will have until Jan. 25 to decide
whether or not they. want to take courses
pass-fail this semester.
Pass-fail options must be declared by that
date. Once declared, a student must take the
course pass-fail.
Procedures for signing up vary from
Police arrest man
in Winston dormitory
A man was arrested in Winston dorm at
5: 15 p.m. yesterday and charged with public
drunkenness and trespassing by the campus
police.
Kenneth W. Wright. 30. is being held in
Orange County Jail in Hillsborough having
failed to raise $150 bond, according to
Chapel Hill police.
A Winston resident, who asked that her
name not be used, said that the man stayed
around the second floor most of the day.
"He came around, drunk, at 1 1 a.m.
asking for a Humble Pie album." she said.
'"We didn't have one so we sent him
somewhere else," she continued.
The Winston coed said that he left the
dorm when the resident director, Winkie
McDaniel, asked him to, but that he
returned and was arrested.
"He was a pain," the unidentified student
said, "but he was very polite and really
funny."
school to school. Students in the General
College should see their advisers for pass-fail
forms. The forms should be filled out by the
adviser and turned into the General College.
Students in other schools or colleges
should go to the departmental offices for
pass-fail forms. Procedure information will
be available there.
All courses can be taken pass-fail except:
required physical education. English and
math foreign language option courses
divisional electives
courses in the major or courses
specifically required by number in the major.
If a major is switched, one of the courses in
the old major may be taken pass-fail.
Each student must take at least 1 5 hours of
letter-grade credit to be eligible for Dean's
List.
The maximum amount of pass-fail credit
that can be applied to graduation is 24 hours.
Pass-fail will be limited to seven hours per
semester next year, but there is no limit this
semester on the amount of pass-fail credit
taken at one time.
DTH in error
Due to a typesetting error, a statement by
Vice Chancellor John Temple appeared
incorrectly in a story about the campus
police in Monday's Daily Tar Heel. The
sentence should have said, " Temple said he
saw problems with the present shift
arrangement." The Daily Tar Heel regrets
the error.
IV TT O Q T! j "
ixoi poMic
I inmeiilho
OS
by Seth Effron
Associate Editor
Frank Mankiewicz, political director for the 1972 McGovern presidential
campaign, will discuss the current political climate and his recent book at 4 p.m.
today at the Wesley Foundation.
Author of the newly published book. Perfectly Clear: Nixon from Whit tier to
Watergate, Mankiewicz will appear with UNC English professor Jim Reston.
Reston worked with Mankiewicz gathering information for the book. Copies of the
book will be available at the discussion.
Topics to be discussed range from Nixon politics to impeachment.
In a recent television interview Mankiewicz predicted "Gerald Ford will be
president by the first of June and perhaps before."
In his book, Mankiewicz charges Nixon with a long, murky political past of using
tricks that became hardened with time and use.
"As a college student when my classmates included Bob Haldeman and John
Erlichman, I watched him (Nixon) destroy Jerry Voorhis in 1946," said
Mankiewicz. Irj 1950 Mankiewicz ran for the California State Legislature on the
same ticket as Hellen G. Dourlass "when we really saw for the first time the
emergence of what we called Nixon politics, but which will be known in history as
Watergate politics."
In the early sixties, Mankiewicz served as a director of Peace Corps activities in
Latin America. In 1966 he became press aid to the late Robert F. Kennedy, a
position he held until Kennedy's assassination in 1968.
Following his work for Kennedy, he co-authored a syndicated Washington
column with Tom Barden. In May 1971 he joined the presidential campaign
organization of Senator George McGovern.
it :
i
v
Frank Mankiewicz, George
McGovern's campaign director in 1972,
will speak at 4 p.m. today in Wesley
Foundation. He will discuss his new
book on President Nixon and politics.
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