age Ten Grayle Howlett Nx -OFF BASE Tommy Aaron and other assorted losers Of all the little bits of file-and-forget material which pass this way; some do manage to get a tempoary reprieve from the. wastebasket. One such item was about a Toronto fireman who, in performing his duties of putting out a fire in a house, went beyond the call by racing into the blazing structure in order to{ rescue the homeowner's pet dog. t After a successful rescue, the fireman was immediately ,rushed to a Toronto hospital-not as result of eating smoke, but as a result of a dog-bite. The reason this piece of non-information is of interest to me is because of its philosophical implications. There is much support for the philosophy that the world's population is divided into the "winners" and the "losers." And by pre-determined design the winners can only win and the losers can only lose. The.Toronto fireman seems to be the classic example of the loser. But lest we forget, this type of philosophy took root in sports. Sports not only has glamorized the winners but 'have heaped much of the spotlight on the losers. The losers are nice enough guys with all the ability, but they fail to win the championships. The athletes who have traditionally worn this collar are well known: -Wilt Chamberlai min basketball, Orlando Cepeda in baseball, and Don Meredith in football. Being a sceptie of the "losers philosophy" I only have to point to the facts. Chamberlain played on many losers but it was through his great play that the Philadelphia 76'ers up-ended the Boston Celtics for the NBA champion- ship last year.* Cepeda, out of ear-shot of Herman Franks, became a leader in the Cardinal's cop of the World Championship. And Mere- dith shook off the loser tag t6 spur his Dallas Cowboys on toj two straight Eastern Division NFL titles. It was his defense which' lost the championship. I'd being even willing to bet that that Toronto fireman wasn't bitten-he just tore his hand onj that dog's tooth., However, a '4onvincing argument has come this way in rebuttal. The adherents of the "losers philosophy" have new, fuel in the recently completed Masters Golf Championship. No, Robert DiVicenzo isn't the new nomination. After all, a rule is a rule. Checking and signing a scorecard is something he does four times a week, 52 weeks a year. Tommy Aaron is their candidate. Remember him? He was DiVicenzo's partner who put down the wrong score. That's kind of a twist for Aaron who instead of just losing the tournament, managed' to lose it for somebody else. Aarondoes, in fact, have the credentials of a loser. The 31- yea old bespectacled native of Georgia has failed to win a to irney in his eight years as a pro. He came close in the 1963 Cleveland Open when he tied Palmer for the lead, but lost handily in the playoff.I In the 1965 Bob Hope Classic, Aaron led after three rounds but he' couldn't hold back the "Pre-buffalo Staks" Billy Casper. In 1966, Aaron was the frQnt runner after three rounds in the San Diego Open, but true Ito form he couldn't hold his lead. It's not thatAaron has beep a complete bust on the pro tour. As a matter of fact, he has managed to make quite a nice living on the PGA trail. His best year was 1965 when the 30 tournaments he entered netted him $44,829.15 in of- ficial money earnings, good for 17th place on the leading money winners list. Not counting this year, in the last four seasons Aaron has won $136,381.58, or an average of $1,175.70 ! per tournament-not bad for four days' work. Despite the apparent affluence, Aaron would probably cash in a few paychecks for just one victory. With that victory would come a few endorsements and maybe a shot on "Shell's Wonder- ful World of Golf," a promised land on which losers .don't get to tread.' The word on ,the tour is "Aaron wins plenty of money but never a tourney.''It may be the kiss of death to be leading the tourney on the fourth day with Arnold Palmer right behind you, but it's summer wine to have Tommy Aaron ahead of you on the last round. Aaion fills out the loser role so well that whenever he gets a hole-in-one, he's playing alone. It's rumored that Aaron once took a little side-trip from the tour up to the Grand Canyon- but it was closed. Losers are very well publicized in sports. They are almost deified. In his great career, the thing Sam Snead will probably be most remembered for' is that he never won a United States Open. Al Kaline could hit over .400 the rest of his career, but unless the Tigers win a pennant this is the memory he'll have to live with. But Aaron has added tragic overtones to the loser. He no longer loses just for himself but for others too. Aaron may be the losers' loser. As the second half of the PGA season begins, the pressure really mounts for one Tommy Aaron. Just look what his first victory will do. First of all, it will take away the greatest under- dog the nation's underdog rooters have ever had. id second, it will destroy once and for all the followers of the loser's 'philosophy. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wecnpvviv.AAnv, ,1 199R~ ..4c *'....J..J .. 7 *lIFy l F 'f O 1 hAv D ~Reading £A VUUsi e t4I ii Advertisement Soar Advertisement 0n nn Arhor. 40000 GrduteThrot Entering its second year magazines. boo s. joutrnals. of operation in the Miehi- reports and memos. Too! aan area. Evelyn Wood much homework. Even the Reading D y n a to i c s has people who try to keep up taught more than 1.500 peo- are falling behind. Things ple here to increase their are just happening too fast.' reading efficiency from 3 to too many changes. 10 times. There is only one solution It is one of 72 institutes -improve your reading ef-. from which more than 400,- ficiency. 000 people have graduated You. provide the will.' since Mrs. Wood began Evelyn Wood Reading Dy- teaching h e r outstanding namics provides the way. method in 1959 after 14 There is no gimmick. It is years of research. a skill. There is no skipping Reading at the faster rate or skimming. Every word is and i n c r e a s e d efficiency read. No machines are used, otor Lodge guaranteed by Reading Dy- the material you read de- namics is a far cry from the termines your speed. way people read 100 years Regarding comprehension overy 'ago, the way you are read- -Institute students actually ing this now, word by word, understand and enjoy read- about 250-350 words "per ing more than when they minte. A hundred years read the way you do. Read. ago, even 10 years ago. that ing efficiency is an index| Sion are stressed kind of reading was all right. that includes comprehensioni Today, it won't work. as well as reading speed. ;There's just too much to For example, the members t0 at a titu and;3 {heread. Too many letters, of one class at the Detroit, rarely re-read a wordor ugliout U. S. a Institute in reased then average reading speed from 27 words per minute to 1- 553 words per minute with an increase in comprehen- sion from 69.2% to 731. The reading efficiency rate rose from 187 to 1,115. That class included busi- ness executives. salesmen. secretaries, clerks, educators. tradesmen, housewives, engi- neers, scientists, an account- ant, teachers and students. The average graduate will read five times as fast as lie did when he began the course, with good under- standing and recall. Guaranteeing to at least. triple the reading efficiency of its students. Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics will not charge for the course if this goal is not met. The next sessions begin May 2 and 6. Reservations are, still open. but are quickly being filled. Classes will be held at the YMCA and th Howard Johnson M Mrs. Wood's isc Helps ManyRea * Faster reading and improved comprehen Evelyn W o o d Reading w a te h e d hi. And he, Dynamics is a discovery, not, marked the paper without? an invention. ' having missed a detail. Iparagraph because 'they did Kenn People h a ve Mrs. XWood knew an aver- not understand it. bee n reading] age college graduate reads NIrs. Wood taught herself 'More than 400.000 gra rapidly for ecu- between 250-300 words per these principles. By the time Evelyn Wood Reading tunries. Samuel minute. She began to won.she was able to read several stitute have learned to Tohaso read as der ii si could attaii a - thousand words per iute. and with equal or grey fast as lie could ilar speed to her professor's. she diseoered she had de- ension. Among these w turn pages, Bos- In a two-vear search fort veloped a system for teach of the White House a Mrs. Wood well said. H. L. other exceptionally rapid ing others. staff under John F. Ken Mencken could read a 250- readers. she found 50 people It took another 12 ars President Kennedy, w page hook in an hour. from all walks of life 'whoa before the system was fully ey Wood made er Could read faster than L500 d e v e t o p e d . tested a n d EDITORIA L discovery in 1945 when she words per minute. proved. She opened her first' was working on a master's, Analyzing them, she found Reading Dynamics Institutes By Frank Kowalik' degree at the University of' they shared these character- in Washington, D.C., in 1959. Regional Institute Director Utah. One of her professors.i istics: 1I They read down a And in a short eight years, As director of the Michi- Dr. C. Lowell Lees, read her] page, not just from left toshe has opened Institutes igan institute two ol ' the 80-page thesis at a fantastic right; 2) They read groups!72 prinicipal c i t i e s in the questions I hear most often speed, shte discovered as :she of words rather than one or Uted States and Canada. are: Who are some of the :..::::..:..:.".. :::::.::: (graduates and, what results can I expect'? edy Aides Hiked Speed duates of the Dynamics In- read faster ater compre- sere members administrative nedy. ho read fast naturally at an estimated 1.200 words per minute, asked them to take the course. Later, his brother. U.S. Sen. Ed. ward Kennedy and his sister-in-law Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy, successfully completed the course as did dozens of U.S. congressmen. 4 t Course Praised by Ann Arbor Residents By attending Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics, many Ann Arbor residents have increased their reading effi- ciency at least three times what it was. Here are the com- ments of some of them: Increase Your T h e Evelyn Wood Read- i n g Dynamics course is serv- i n g people Reading Eficiency Up to 4.7 Tim es as the White House staff under the late Presi- dent Kennedy, members of Congress, execu- tives, educators, doctors, lawyers, housewives, and high school and college students have, from. all 'of 1i f e facets Men, Frank Kowatik women, b o y s and girls of age 13 to 87 are! taking the course. They are administrators, clerks, execu- tives, salesmen, tradesmen,, officers, housewives, stou-' dents, accountants, lawyers, doctors, engineers, and edu- cators - people from many; occupations who have learned this new reading skill-they now read dynamically. To relate the results we can refer to the average Reading Dynamics graduate who is an independent read- er now reading more than 1500 words per minute with equal or better comprehen- sion. The speed of most un- trained readers is between 200 and 400 words per min-, .t4..! WilliamG. Lawless Weather Forecaster "I could ne v e r 'read fast enough to enjoy a novel. It was a chore to stay with it until the end. It's different now; I get much, pleasure out of reading, and read much more. "While I was taking the course,-I realized that in the 51%2 years of studying for my college degrees, I never real- ly learned how to study." Fraser Cocks Ill Graduate Student U of M ' "I enrolled in the course to improve my reading speed so that I could cope more easily with the vast amount of reading I had to do in my graduate work. I can fin- ish my, necessary reading in much less time; understand the subject matter better, and retain it much longer. It's great to have the time to read a book or two for slicer pleasure." Tom Wight Program Director WPAG Radio 1 your are invited to attend a, _FREE.OE NSR T N * You will see a Reading Dynamics graduate read at amazing speeds from a book he has never seen before and then tell in detail what he had read. * You will see a documented film that includes actual inter- views with Washington Congressmen who have taken the course. * You will learn how we can help you to faster reading, improved comprehension, greater recall. "I can read a book in 22 hours. I was able to increase my reading efficiency with increased comprehension tre- mendously. "Reading is a very import- ant part of my job since there are many trade publi- cations, broadcast nforma- tion, schedules, scripts, etc. to be 'read daily. Any improvement in my reading efficiency would be an im. portant asset so I am gratin fied and amazed at my re- suits."- Michael E. Weyier 'Instructor "I took the course in antici- pation of the extensive re- search work I would be ex- pected to do--during my doe toral thesis program. I found, a f t e r taking the course, that the amount of reference material I can read in a given amount of time has increased tremendously and my recall is amazing." Thomas Jameson Manager, Quality Control Gelman Instrument "My educational background is .in chemical engineering. In order 'to, keep up with current happenings in my profession. I must do a lot of technical reading pertain- ing especiallytoquality con- trol. In order to get the very most out of this material, I had to drastically cut the time spent in pleasure read- ing whicht is one of my hob- bies. After taking the Evelyn Wood R e a d i n g Dynamics course. I find I have time for much more technical and pleasure reading. Robert Douma ' Student U of M 6 Andrew McCosh Ann Arbor it t a a , JUST FORt YOUR MOTHER Your Mother is a very special person. That's why Hallmark has taken the extra care to create acollection of beautiful Mother's Day cards that put your nicest thoughts into words for Sunday, May 12. In our complete selection of Hallmark cards, you'll find one so special it '4. / Wednesday, May 1 YM and YWCA 350 S. 5th Ave. 5 &8 P.M. Thursday, May 2 YM and YWCA 350 S. 5th Ave. 5 & 8 P.M. U Le. -:11 v The Michigan institute is I devoted ten hours a week one of the 72 opened in the to technical reading before United S t at e s and we are I took the Evelyn Wood elated to find that people Reading Dynamics course. I in this area have made our now save between four and initial group of classes sue- eight hours of my time go- cessful. 'When we opened tihe ing over time samne anmount Michigan Institute we knew of material. the people would be inter-: ested in personal improve Mrs. Alice Abramowitz muent in the specific direc- Secretary ion of reading skils. The "What the Heading Dynam- s u e c e s s of the initial pro- ics course did for me was SENATE LEADERS PRAISE TECHNIQUE ^"' "-: ? OL ". Sen. Proxmire, Wisconsin "I must say that this is one; of the most useful education] experiences I have ever had. It certainly compares favor-, ably -wh the experiences' I've had at Yale and Har- vard." Sen. Talmadge, Georgia' "It is my opinion that if these techniques were insti- tuted in the public and private schools of our coup- try, it would he the greatest single ste p hich - could take in educational prog- res. gramn classes proved this. In' addition, we are 'pleased; with the pre-registration en-a jrolhnent for the classes. As part of Reading Dy-' tiamics I can assure you thatI we will endeavor to earn a ;proud position in the conm- munity and that we are oh-i ligated to those who have taken our c o u r s e and to, those who will take it. to increase my belief in myl ability to read. I had no real enthusiasm for reading since it took iie to a longj time to finish a book. I read freely now; read much more and with a greater degree of comprehension. Dave McMullen' Student Ann Arbor High School r For Further Information Call The course introduced a $i t . w V..!Ifof 1r I .&.-a;4 1 Ped 'i11na