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b0iu hAl0, I'ran the tod for a four 3 p w od, with a dternde If ,eidet 1 ~tpo tiuw open ho6e. fto iOmsnt to thi of- Men, stated that he fell t tbte web -not much in He Wso felt that "thes I '00041f that the fbiir'wek thW period will'Ontinue as planned.' Aylliatiheare beftng take. IM *ktnnr JObs Sit,the Erx. Pt(Wti0h'0tOrs which will open i A001 as part of the South Carolin or full time werk as towi guides is aale beginning Apri 4. ,h* positions wi be fuH Um4 froi June 1 through Sept. 15. Eddie Shore, USC sophomot from Andemson, is coordinator a the Youth Division of the Tricentennial. Applications should consist of a resume of dub, church and schoo Fredhmen basketbaU-U9C vs. '1e Ctadel Carolina Coseum, 6 p.m. USC vs. Wake Forest, Carobna CoUauan, p.m. Movle--"Modesty Blaiss" with Dirl Bogarde, Moules Vittle and 'rweWre Stamp Directed by Joseph LAsey.3.6and9p.m.in th Russell Houe Auditorium. Movie-"A Man and a Woman" with Anot Aimee and Jean-Loauls'intignant,directed t Claude Lalouch. 3, 6 and 9 p.m. in the Ru House Auditorium. Engineers Joint Council, Russell Ho Conference Room, 5 p.m. Mortar Board - Meeting, Capstone 00 nerstone Room, 7:36 p.m. Feb. ti SCvs. Davidson. Carolina Coalseun, fre men e 6 p.m. and varity a p.m. Pactice, Intramural field "B," p.m. student National Education Associati 100C Wardiaw. 5 p.m. Feb.i Tbisn Girls Association meeting, Room U Russell House, 7 p.m. Al town giris invitk The ltepe s&4.Q ommittee sponsor chess, Roon 105, Cuirrell Coge, 6:30 p.m. A beginners'and advanced players are welcom Movie--"Black orpheus" witk marpm Dawn and Brno Mello, directed by Marm Camus. 3. 6 and 9 p.m.. Russell Houl Auditorium. Feb.14. Carolina Wives Club tea with Mrs. Joni President's home, 4:30 p.m. SUSC vs. Duke, Carolina Coliseum, 1:30 p.i Rally exceeded limi I(C'ontinued from page 1)i Dr. Paul Fidler, of the Stude, Affairs division, commented on ft statement by saying that ft purpose of the statement was thi "the university was concerne about the safety of property aui persons. "The administration felt thi such a statement was necessar because of the emotional topk scheduled for discussion." "1 don't k~now that anybodi counted the number of noi students there. We left that up I the organizations. But from a reports I have received, the apparently did exceed the limit. Fidler stated that AWARE, ori of the organizations involve would have to go before Ut Student Affairs Committee to fac probable charges of violation regulations governing suc meetings. He also said that the at ministration stipulated the limi and that the UFO Offense Coalitic * agreed to the stipulation. Friday. five people wer arrested by Columbia police fc violation of a Columbia City Cod regulation prohibiting th * distribution of "illegal parr phlets." .Carol McEldowney, Davi ~itzgerald, Clint Paige, Judy Sci partz and Niki Singleton wer hqtarged with the offense, and at earing Saturday mornin requested jury trial. They ar schdued to appear i leagistrate's court Wednesday. Meanwhile, the group's lawyei ja,nes Riepoltz, is seeking ~ederal temporary restrainin order and a state injunction in a *ort to postpone the tiral. Mis Singleton is a USC coet the Gamecock TW4s 1riefs Iose- co lnthKb Ig eneflry, high scheot nd colIege activities and a pic Aplctions should be sent to -EddIe Shore, Box' U-3ts, USC, or to the S. C. Tricentennial Com mission, P.O. Box 1970, Columbia, S. V. 292, Attention Summer. Employment. AidStation Students at Ft. Lauderdale during spring break may receive fre coffee, cokes and doughnuts while they.ate getting their tan and otherwise enjoying their holiday. The Universal Free Life Church has announced that it will have a canteen trailer set up on the beach where they will dispense food and band-aids, aspirins and other services. Church leader the Rev. Dr. Art Foi said that the church trailer will coordinate ides home from the beach for students who need them. ly Author ..Noted author Howard Zir Offensive Coalition Rally at page 1). Hall coun cited for By PAM SCROGGINS Staff Writer Housing official Jimmy Cooper says hail counselors are one of Carolina's biggest assets, helping to solve the "unseen problems" of University life. The biggest difference between the jobs of the men and women counselors is pay and disciplinary taction. The income for a male hall e counselor is $60 per month for the e first year of service, $75 per month tfor the second year, and $85 per d month for the third year. For a d female hall 'counselor the income per month is $60 for a sophomore, t$67.50 for a junior and $75 for a senior.. Disciplinary problems are also handled differently. All problems encountered in girl's dorms are handled by A. W. S., whereas in men's dorms the hall counselor II may recommend study hall or ,, probation for infraction of rules with resident counselor's per e mission. d Both men and women prospects e must fill out an application, have a Every Tuesday Night SIZZLIN' reguh e . -. n. "W erego ai 54 KU tinues Church representatives will be at the local jail to give out ee cigarettes, coabs and tooth brushes and to give any help they can. Emphradian Socety Every Tuesday night for the past 164 years the Euphradian Society has met on the University campus at 7 p.m., and for the last 132 years, it has met in its special halls on the third floor of Harper College. The goal of the Euphradian Society is to develop in its mem bers the art of oral persuasion, and coincidentally to provide all with an entertaining hour each Tuesday night. The Society extends an open invitation to all male students to come by this Tuesday to join in the discussions (past topics include University athletics, integration and politics). speaks W in spoke Sunday at the UFO the Russell House. (See story selors work 2.0 or better, and be a sophomore, junior, or senior. Only outstanding sophomore students are chosen from the applicatnts. Men and women go through relatively the same training session though women are in terviewed not only by the dean and assistant dean of women but also by a panel of women students. Responsibilities include weekly room check, supervision, and keeping halls relatively quiet for study, but mostly providing help to students. Julianne Still, hall counselor in South, thinks that the best part of her job is getting to know so many people. "It makes you feel great when they come to you with their problems." "The hardest part is trying to be a policeman while being a coun selor, and also helping the girls with their problems," says Mary Adams, hail counselor in Wade Hampton. "The best part is when one of the girls has a really big problem and she turns to you for help." is.. STUDENT NIGHT SIRLOIN 5 p.m. '''' Cl'''"g STEAK DINNER st present your student tification to cashier. Our ir $1.69 sizzlin' sirloin steak served with baked potato, green salad and garlic toast. R$11A is a family affair" ABBOTT DRIVE There are 1,216 words I this message. If you read s an average reaingspe you will require. nearl fi minutes to read it. I yo had developed the simpi skill of Dynamic Readinj you would be nearly hall way through the article b now. There are many Reac ing Dynamics rduate who could read this pa* with full comprehension I less than 32 seconds. But don't be embarrasse about your slow reading The simple fact is that yo don't read slowly by avet age standards; but by th standards of Reading Dy namics you poke at a snail' pace - probably readin btween 250 and 400 word per minute. You are n< alone. Most of your frienc and neighbors-and man highly placed professioni people-can't read any fas er an you. Many undoub edly read at a considerabi slower pace. Most Reading Dynami< graduates can read an avej age novel in less than th time it would take them t watch the Ed Sullivan Shoi on Sunday night. And the read with full compreher sion and complete enjo) ment. You can, too, on< you have acquired the em traordinary skill of Dynan ic Reading. Most Austin Reading D) namics graduates have not finished this article. Bs please keep going. In recent years over 500,00 people have graduated fro, Reading Dynamics Inst tutes throughout the natic and abroad. All of thes people took the course wit the guarantee that the reading efficiency would least triple in the short spa of eight lessons. In virtual: every case, when the studei attended class sessions, th exciting promise came tru Reading Dynamics maki you the same astonisim guarantee: We guarantee1 increase your reading effic ency at least 3 times. '%1 will refund the entire tu tion to any student who, a ter completing minimu class and study requir ments, does not at lea triple his reading efficien as measured by standard 1, ginning and ending test Reading efficiency combin speed and comprehensic not speed alone. In Austin alone, over 5,0 people have benefited frc Reading Dynamics. For FORi1 EVELYN W ATTEND A TODAY m ample, records from roc ,t fall classes show a speed i I, crease from 307 to 2,4: e words per minute with a comprh ension. improi e ment of 7%. Many peop , who read Dynamically ha developed their skill sb su y cessfully that they are ab 1- to read at even higher rat4 s Astonishing? Yes, it is. B e true. m At this point you are pro ably a bit incredulous. V a admit our promises a . dramatic - indeed, ove u whelming. But they a based on documented stati e tical cast histories of oi thousands of s t u d e n i s When you become one i g our students-even thoul s you may be a relatively sli it reader now-you, too wi is contribute to our startlii y record of achiev-,ment. il Evelyn Wood first obse-4 - Dynamic Reading 18 yei t- ago when a professor at C y University of Utah read h term paper at an amazii S 6,000 words per minui Mrs. Wood's curiosii e caused her to look for oth o exceptional readers, aj V over the next few years, sl y found 50 people who cou i- read faster than 1,500 wor F- per minute, with fine coi e prehension, outstanding i call, and great satisfacti< - in reading. "Reading is a waste of tin - slow or fast, if you dor v understand what you a t reading," stated Eveli Wood at a recent teach 0 training conference. "If y< n are not comprehending, y4 i- are not reading." n The first thing you a e asked to do after enrollih h in the Evelyn Wood Rea ir ing Dynamics course is it forget everything you ha n ever been taught about he y to read. Reading Dynami at teaches you to read ov is again. A relatively fi e. reader beginning the cour s does not have any partic g lar advantage over an a :o erage reader starting t i-course. You will be taug e to read not just with yo i- eyes, but with all yo fsenses. Words will becot n ictures, and pages will r< - by like frames on film. Yo st eyes will learn to move :y rhythmic patterns down t e- page and through the v< :s. ume; and you will read wi es thorough comprehension ns, a fraction of the time takes you now. )0 As a child you were taut m to "hear" the words as y x- read them. You will HE FIRST TIM THE WOF OOD READING FREE SPEED AND TOMORR( AT THE SHE ACROSS FRON~ PHONE t untau hat cumbersome rn r- technPque and discover that y .8 you can read swiftly and o a meaningfully by circum- tf e- venting your old audio d le reading patterns. Once this s ee eye-to-mind communication n c- has been established, you le practically eliminate the ne s. cessity of saying, hearing, or I It re-thinking words. You will n no longer read word-by- i b- word or even phrase-by- t re phrase; indeed, as you de- 1 re velop your skill; neither i r- will you read sentence-by- I re sentence. Instead, you will I s- read in "chunks." You will i ar visually lift large blocks of f :s. material from the printed h >f page and instantaneously i: Ih project actions and pictures n w onto the screen of your im- N 11 agination. As the course de- a ig velops your Reading Dy- h namics skills, you will dis- v d cover the exhiliration of ex- a rs periencing the vitality of t ,e the printed page. Reading t er will become less and less e ag like reading, as it becomes r :e. more and more a process of p :y experiencing. c er Dynamic Readers, having a ad finished this article, are now I ie pages ahead of you in the 0 Id newspaper. Is As you read, your hand will s n- function as a pacer, swiftly e e- brushing across printed ma- 8 in terial as the words well in- r to pictures in continuous, l e, dramatic flow. You will be ) i't gratified at your increased I r speed; you will be* moved c Fn by your newly developed er sensitivity to literary values; II and you will be thrilled at au the high degree of reten tion of the printed mate re rial after it has been read. 1g Many Reading Dynamics d- graduates find that their to ability to recall even high ye ly technical material long 'W after it has been read is the cs single most valuable aspect er of their new skill. st The EvlnWood Reading u- Dynamics teaching staff in -Austin is highly experi he enced. Naturally, all in ht structors are college trained. ur Our Reading Dynamics in ur structors do not teach skim ne ming. They teach improved ,ll reading and study efficiency ur which includes both speed in and comprehension. Skim he ming techniques negate im )l- proved comprehension and th are therefore unacceptable in in the Evelyn Wood meth it od As Mrs. Wood frequently ;ht points out, "You read five ou times faster not by reading be every fifth word, but by E EVER IN COLU [LD FAMOUS DYNAMICS INVIT READING DEMON )W AT 3, 5, and RATON HOTEL I THE COLISEUM 787- 146. -ading five times as many ords in the same amount f time. It is impossible to ,11 which words to skip or isregard until you have ten them all and deter ined their relative im ortance and meaning." ,ou may be assured that ,eading Dynamics is the iost comprehensive read. ig improvement course in ie world today. 'he Dynamic Reader, hav 2g finished this newspaper, off doing something else.' n this supersonic, electron :, automated age, it is com Drting to know that man as discovered a way to nprove not just things and iachines but man himself. IVhen your minimum guar ntee of tripling your read ,g skill comes to pass, you ilI find that you can read nd absorb at least three imes more material in the ime it now takes you to fficiently complete present eading commitments. To ut it another way, our av rage student can read and bsorb in 10 minutes what reviously required an hour ,r more. In an age where our most precious posses ions are time and knowl dge, isn't this a wonderful ift to give yourself? The are and exciting gift of elf-improvement. It can be ours after EIGHT SHORT ,ESSONS. The 32 second hallenge is now over. O.K., So. you failed. Here's " haS od about Sit. 0i.d:i I 001in i \ le s ns t . w l h 0 MBnte thswe.\ l ESi Y.kOs Onlse S:dTRAneTIONmi . 8n P.M.it iws- h