' "it 'If ' 4 -' ft 1 w . Xt 1 '4 4', V ' 4 n: u. 'A .1 M Am r In the space of an hour you can learn more about reading than you thought possible. Attend a FREE Mini Lesson on the Evelyn Wood Course, where you will learn how to read 3-4-5 times faster with comprehension. MINI-LESSON SCHEDULE TONIGHT, FEB. 9TH 4 p.m. andor 5 p.m. CLASSES BEGINNING TUES., FEB. 10 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS HOI r lincoln, Neb. Special Bonus Tutorial Seminars History 84 "Europe Sinct tht French Revolution" Lock and Dimmort sections Get your reading assignments don while practicing Read ing Dynamics techniques. Seminars throughout the semester will be led by a history major honors student. Class discussion and instructor feedback. Better grades and effecient study. 3 p.m. -5:30 p.m. Mondays m Rep. Powell will speak Feb. 19 The Rev. Adam Clayton Powell Jr., controversial black congressman from New York City, will speak at the East Campus Union Feb. 19. Powell will arrive the morn ing of the speech, according to Mamee Rojewski, of the East Union Special Events com mittee. He will confer with members of the Afro-American Collegiate Society before the speech, she said. Since entering politics in 1941, Powell has been one of the most controversial members of the House of Representatives, Miss Rojewski pointed out. Powell won re-election to the House in 1964 by the largest plurality he had ever obtained, but he came under increasing fire for his use of public funds in widespread travels. Before the 1967 session of Congress, the House voted to deny him his seat in the 90th Congress the fifth man in this century to receive such a penalty. Powell immediately filed suit to regain his seat. In November of 1968, consti tuents of Harlem, who had been without representation In Congress for a year and a half, again elected Powell to the House, again by a gigantic majority. Powell immediately an nounced he would take his seat in the 91st Congress, with or without seniority. When, on January 3, 1969, the House voted 251 to 160 to seat Powell, he agreed to their conditions that he pay a $25,000 fine and lose years of seniority. " 'iiini.Mi ; l Adam Clayton Powell Protest result hard to measure Organizers of the Monday evening pro test against Vice President Spiro Agnew refused over the weekend to speculate how many demonstrators will show up Monday night. Mike Shonsey, coordinator of the Moratorium Committee, said that "a couple of hundred" demonstrators might make the protest successful. But success is awlays "hard to measure," he added. Shonsey and other members of the Moratorium Committee outlined tactics for the anti-Agnew activities at a weekend news conference. Shonsey described the planned demonstration as "peaceful" with people standing along the edge of the sidewalk at Pershing Auditoium. "There will be no marching or obstructing of traffic and we have the cooperation of the police department " he explained. ' The Vice President is scheduled to ar rive at the Lincoln Municipal Airport about 1:30 p.m. The demonstration will begin about 6 p.m. in front of Pershing Municipal Auditorium. In the afternoon a rally will be held at 3:30 in the Union Ballroom prior to the demonstration to explain demonstration procedure. Main speaker at the rally will be John Swomley, professor of Christian Ethics at the St. Paul School of Theology in Kansas City, Mo. Swomley is president of the American Civil Liberties Union In Western Missouri and a member of the National Board of ACLU. He is also a member of the Com mittee on Civil and Religious Liberty of the National Council of Churches and a member of the General Board of Christian Social Concerns of the Methodist Church. rn 0 ODq UvJ OCoo ra February 14 9-12 p.m. Union Ballroom $1.50 (oil proceeds go to the Heart Fund) t PAGE 2 m m m , THE DAILY NEBRASKAN MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1970 Beginning Feb. 16