Wednesday, June 28, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Dare to be Great... and risk your shirt (Continued from Page 4) a sin, guilty parties are 'ikely to discover a friendly agent lean- ing over ther backs, helping them to clap their hands. The pep rally finally ends. Peo- ple flop wearily back into their seats too drained to approach the next part of the program with completely rational minds. NOW COMES the sell job. After a couple of speeches again designed to convince peo- ple that they have the potential to be great, "Doe" Norman com- es running on stage and en- thusiastically leaps into the waiting arms of the previous speaker. Doe's job is to explain the details of the DTBG scheme for becoming rich. Doc is the per- fect man - for the job. He is a dentist who wants money not for his personal aggrandizement but rather so that he will be able to open up a free dental clinic fcr poor people in Detroit. Doc lends an air of respectability' and a touch of altruism to an operation which still seems a bit shady, although very enticing. Following Doc's explanatian of the scheme, a number of oth- er speakers come on stage to shame you, flatter you, and Ini- mor you into buying their pro- gram. SAM RUNCLE, for instance, allays your fears about feeing dumb. "We're nuts but we're de- finitely screwed to the r i g h t bolt." Sam adds, "your neighbor will tell you you're throwing -,our money away. If your neighbor knew how to be rich, do you think he'd be your neighbor?" Lou Hebner comes on stage to flatter you. "Every person in here is worth $1,000 an houtr. There ain't a man in this roWn that can't make $10,000 a month working for Dare To Be Great." Charity is another important aspect of DTBG, according to Hobner. He claims that o t h e r subsidiaries of Turner Enter- prises sell products made by mentally ill people. "By net year, we hope to be the larg- est fundraiser in the country." Lew even gets a little threat- ening at times. "If you were my guest I'd throw you on the ground and make you sign a check." He says he would "put the biggest man at the door to keep people from walking .cut." DTBG also plays on people's patriotism. Ron Romines says "our forefathers died to give us fireedom. Our sans are dying daily for our freedom. DTBG wants to give you the freedom to live the type of life you de- serve to live, without some boss controlling your life." ALL RACES, creeds and -relig- ions are welcome in DTBG. Ac- cording to Romines, "there ain't no white power, there ain't no black power, there ain't no Chi- cano power, there's just g r e e n power." A final DTBG pitch is t h a t everyone in the organization is "just ordinary people.". Hobner said that "most of the people in DTBG don't have college de- grees. Be dumb enough to be- lieve in yourself." The prime example of an or- linary person who made it Wig is Glen Turner, multimillionaire founder of Turner enterprises. According to Romines, "Tuiner is an eighth grade dropout with a harelip, punctured eardrum, and bald head. His family used to make $500 a year on their farm down in Florida." Turner is idolized by m a n y GTBG agents, although Romines assures us that Turner, who is being groomed for the Presi- dency in 1976, "is just an ovdin- ary person. He's no god." THE AFTERNOON program ends with a short film starring Glen Turner. The film takes place on Turner's estate in Flor- ida, and consists of a mono- logue in which Turner philoso- phizes on subjects ranging from his boyhood on a poor farm to his present business." By six, everyone is weary as we all head for the dining room and a steak dinner. My steak was MCAT-DAT-GRE LSAT-ATGSB NAT'L.BD. * Preparation for tests required for admission to graduate and pro- fessonal schools " Six and twelve session groups * Small groups * Voluminous material for home study prepared by experts in .each field E Lesson schedule can be tailored to meet individual needs. Summer Sessions Special Compact Courses Weekends-I ntersessions STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER DETROIT, BRANCH 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd., Suite 113 Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 354-0085 Success Through Education Since 1938. Branches in principol cities in U.S. The Tutoring School with the I Nationwide Reputation raw, and a bit skimpy, consid- - ering that I hadn't eaten since eight in the morning. The remainder of the program, which lasted for another f e w hours, was a repeat of the af- - ternoon. By now a large per- centage of guests have turned their name tags upside d o w n , thus signifying that they h a d signed DTBG contracts. Agents make a few last ditch attempts to convince the skeptics, then everyone leaves for home, ex- hausted and slightly confused lay a full day of yelling, singing, and propaganda. TURNER AND his company do not in themselves pose much of a threat. Turner currently is awaiting trial for conspiracy to cheat and defraud. Dare To Be Great bases its appeal on halftruths. It plays on the genuine frustrations of troubled people for its o w n ends. It utilizes amateurish mass hyp- nosis to make people do what they don't really want to do. In a word, Dare To Be Great uses classic Fascist tactics, right out of Mein Kampf, to enhance its own wealth and power. ITS OVERWHELMING success at provoking blind mindlessness should proviae us with yet ano- ther warning of the susceptibility. of our "silent" majority to de- magogery and mass control. Senator William Proxmire OF WISCONSIN He reads a book in 40 minutes From the Master of Shock. A Shocking Masterpiece! A deadly new twist from the originalHitchcock. Watching Senator Proxmire's hand fly over the pages (his hand acted as a pac- er) you can't believe that he's actually reading. He must be skimming. But he's not. Bill Proxmire can read the average novel irn a little under 40 rinutes. Even on the toughest material he rarely dips below 1,000 words per minute. Moreover, he can comprehend and recall what he's read right down to the smallest detail Bill Proxmire is not a jenius. Nor is he io naturally fast reader. He learned this revolutioniry technique of rapid reoding in the Evelyn Wood course. litheSnari wa nei ourbetter sire dents. He started the course it about 600 words o minjteInd insIreased his rate 4 times. Our average student begins at 300 words a minute and graduates at speeds over 1,500 words a minute. You can do this, too Reading dynamically is often like watch- ing a movie. You have no sense of read- ing words. Sometimes your involvement is so intense that it's as though you're actually there, watching the action take place. Take a free Mini-Lesson In 60 rinutes, over 80% of our Mini -Lesson audiences increase their reading speed. Just a little, but enough to know what it's like. At the Mini-Lesson, you will find out how the Evelyn Wood technique handles difficult textbook material. How it improves memory and concentration. And, how it makes reading a pleasure instead of a chore. The Mini-Lesson is one hour that could change your life, tool FRhiW ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S "FRENZY" a ,suer ")N FINCH - ALEC McCOWEN tBARRY FOSTER BiliE WHITELAW- ANNA MASSEY BARBARA LEIGH-HUNT o- BERNARD CRIBBINS - ItlEN MERCHANT s-ern J[II17 NWld!q[ A-.u.i, i [H. b 8J1 I R aorak'VERS .EA ATTEND A FREE SPEED READING LESSON - TONIGHT - 6:30 or 8:30 P.M. HOLIDAY INN * 3750 Washtenaw (near U.S. 23) Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics, 17320 West Eight Mile Road, Southfield, Mich. 313-353-5111