Page Two
IHE MICHIGAN DAILY
I uesday, October Z, 1 y
Page Two IHE MICHIGAN DAILY uesday, October 2, I ~
... .. .
CSJ voids
RAISES MORE QUESTIONS
Fleming uives tuition hike data
'' P('tl (lYl
Are you still
-
rA ding
the way your
parents read.?
In the first grade, when you were taught
to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it
out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second
grade, you were asked to read silently. But
you couldn't do it.
You stopped reading out loud, but you
continued to say every word to yourself. -
Chances are, you're doing it right now.
This means that you read only as fast
as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per
minute...(Guiness' Book of World Records
lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast-
est speech on record: 327 words per
minute.)
The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you
to read without mentally saying each word
to yourself. Instead of reading one word at
atime, you'll learn to read groups of words.
To see how naturaltthis is, look at the
djot over the line in bold type.
grass is green
You immediately see all three words.
Now look at the dot between the next two
lines of type.
and it grows,
when it rains
With training, you'll learn to use your
innate ability to see groups of words.
As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be
able to read between 1,000 and 3,000
words per minute . . . depending on the
difficulty of the material.
At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's
American Political Tradition and finish
each chapter in 11 minutes.
At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be
.able to read a magazine like Time or News-
(Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) Vice President
last night, Elliot Chikofsky, secre- 0 a deficit on last year's $39.8 fairs Allen Smi
tar-treasurer of the Mad Hatters million dollar tuition revenue bud- gested that ar
Tea Party, charged Hoffman had get of "in the range of $600,000 to the policy cha
been illegally appointed election $700,000". Pierpont had earlier re- can no longer a
director for the second election. ferred to both $600,000 and $800,- m $1.6 milli(
000 as the correct figure. those expense;
Calling the election "cheap and
fradulent," Chikofsky claimed Hoff- 0 the $1.4 million "contingent li- the state app
man's conduct durig the election ability" required by Ager's deci- year." This am
sion. Fleming, however, called this was originally
was impamount "an additional problem" per cent tuition
CSJ DECLARED the meeting at and did not directly describe it as approved by the
which Hoffman was appointed elec- a need to be covered by the fee prior to the Si
tions director illegal, thereby nul- hike. sion on residen
lifing the entire election.
H an estimated $2.5 million to
Hoffman had also publicly en- cover an anticipated loss of reve-
dorsed candidates of the political nue resulting ' from the June Su-
party S.T.O.P., an action illegal preme Court decision. This figure
under the SGC election code. SGC's has been used on numerous occa-
Fair Elections Standard Act states sions by administration officials,
a person partial to any candidates but a staffer in Office of Financial o
can not be appointed an election Analysis suggested last week that
director, the real estimate was $3-4 million.
1IPierpont also used the higher fig- (Continu
ure on one occasion.
for Academic Af- FLEMING'S explanation of -the
Jth had earlier sug- fee hike omitted a series of sta-
principle reason for tistics which officials twice refused
nge was that "we to release last week - statistics
fford it." detailing the estimated revenue
on "used to fund loss pursuant to the Supreme
s not provided by Court decisions.
ropriations for this "The increase in tuition, I rea-
ount, Fleming said, lize, is a big jump in expenses for
covered by the 5-7 our students," Fleming comment-
increase tentatively ed in the report. "And I think it is
t Regents in March, natural for the question to be rais-
bpreme Court deci- ed as to why the increase is need-
cy rules,ed."
The report offered no comment
on the possibility, raised last week,
that offici-ls had intentionally ov-
erestimated on tuition to prevent a
deficit.
"DID THE new tuition rate in-
crease have to be as high as it is?"
Fleming asked rhetorically in his
report. "Does the University ac-
tually need all those extra dol-
lars? The answer to both of those
questions unfortunately is 'yes"'.
mw - Im, -Mew vm"w 9w Rww
'j
week and finish each page in 31 seconds.
At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read the 447 page novel The God-
father in 1 hour and 4 minutes.
These are documented statistics based
on the results of the 450,000 people who
have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course
since its inception in 1959.
The course isn't complicated. There
are no machines. There are no notes to
take. And you don't have to memorize any-
thing.
95% of our graduates have improved
their reading ability by an average of 4.7
times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read.
ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times.
In these instanrpz th tnition ir- completely
refunded.
Take a frtee
Mini-Lesson
on Evelyn Wood. {
Do you want to see how the course
works?
Then take .a free Mini-Lesson.- The
Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what
the Evelyn Wood course offers.
We'll show you how it's possible to
accelerate your speed without skipping a
single word. You'll have a chance to try your
hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually
increase your reading speed. (You'll only
increase it a little, but it's a start.)
We'll show you how we can extend your
memory. And we'll show you how we make
chapter outlining obsolete.
Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a
wild hour. And it's free.
faculty gives approval
vised tenure guidelines
.ed from Page 1)
BIVOUAC
Army-Navy Surplus
518 E. William
"Ascente" Prime
Goose Down , $48.50
Air Force
Parka ... $49.98
(REGULATION FILL)
Air Force
Parka .....$27.00
(6 OZ. FILL, WAIST LENGTH)
Field
Jackets . from $8.95
Field Jacket
lines, is defined as a position nor-
* $695,000 to cover a one-year mally given to those nearing com-
subsidy to teaching fellows no long- pletion of their doctorate. Assump-
er receiving in-state tuition bene- tion of the title as assistant pro-'
fits. Fleming claimed the tradi- fessor upon completion of the doc-
tion of offering in-state fees to all torate program is considered more
TF's "has always exposed us to a or less automatic.
series of criticisms both within and In at least two points, the policy
without the University," but did -by not amending the University
not describe those criticisms. Bylaws-is at variance with the
FALL SEMESTER - ISRAEL
Brandeis University The Jacob Hiatt University Institute
Studv in Jerusalem /Jul -December- 1974
guidelines established by the Amer-'
ican Association of University Pro-
fessors (AAUP).
The University tenure rules re-
quire eight years to attain de facto
tenure as opposed to the seven-'
year AAUP suggestion, and the
University also will not recognize
teaching experience outside the{
state in its probationary require-
ments.
IN OTHER action, the LSA fac-
ulty unanimously lowered the size'
of the jointstudent-faculty'policy
committee from a 20 to ,a 12-mem-
ber body - six student members
and six faculty members-but the
body wvas wary of increasing stu-
dent .,wer in the committee.
A proposal to make all 12 mem-'
bers students was defeated, as was
a motion to elect a student chair-
Psychology Prof. Martin Gold
said the election of a student chair-
person would be "a step in the
right direction" and answered fac-
ulty concern that the committee
would be dominated by student
concerns.
"I THINK parliamentary pro-
cedure is adequate protection for
any group," said Gold.
Other faculty members, however,
were not so sure that student
issues would not fill the agenda.
"I can see us discussing from
now until doomsday new grading
prosopals," said History Prof. Sid-
ney Fine
"We'll be voting for the rest of
our lives on thesame proposals."
The motion was subsequently de-
feated.
LSA faculty tabled consideration
of proposed amendments to the
faculty code on the admissions
. committee pending further discus-
sign on graduation requirements.
7 y53 e1 uu5u5 57 t M F, 1719'
JUNIORS AND SENIORS ELIGIBLE
Four courses/Hebrew not required/Earn16 credits
COST: $18501 tuition, room, board
Financial Aid Available
APPLICATION DEADLINE MARCH 1ST
For Information Write:
THE JACOB HIATT INSTITUTE
BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY
WALTHAM, MASSACUSETTS 02154
person with
person.
a faculty vice-chair-
'IHIII 1111illi IE
ALL MINI-LESSONS HELD AT: U-M STUDENT UNION (Anderson Room)
I I I II.i~'IiIhIIII' lilt II;
Monday, October 1-3 p.m. or 7 p.m.
Tuesday, October 2-3 p.m. or 7 p.m.
Wednesday, October 3-3 p.m. or 7 p.m.
Thursday, October 4-3 p.m. or 7 p.m.
Liners......
$3.99
' Special Student Rates
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
17320 W. Eight Mile Road
Southfield, Mich. 48075-313-353-5111
Army Field
Coats .......$7.98
Er
Pea Coats . .
$25.00
Wool Air Force
Coats ...... $10.00
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