17 The Daily Nebroskan Monday, March 18, 1957J ii 1 ' '-I i f .1 i I' J 1 I y" A very Avenue C- , 1 'v. I'"""" plant . I : ilk , , il fin1 ill i; V, j x 1 Education "j II I tStarag trV; Tl ' I COUr Phviral rtf. field 'i- i Vs f Sohulte 1 Freshman practice field J i 1 I j j ' orlh Side A. oue J I ,j r n n in k-k-jlsji i 4X j i I I IS V) North Mall Drive Vat ftggL , , y -5 JM I It f) I I ( U 1)1 e -P I Li-HM-1 I S J fiMj4 V K South Mall IVive 5 B""fl I f X f il Private property i l1 lopl fi& l 2 i j H-T Lfi -ILrr1 MJ yorardl I K 1 LJ Lu till L4itJ ( B il irnfl s,.,den. iiV ( LLjs! c t1 ,u lP3 Richard. HallVVbrTHairi Health j 3l&7 j- H (or Iomk-h - T ' HO-n Memorial, t 11 I I 1 1 "1 H h . S Street Private i t fiiV?fl !jliSi i I &V x J T Addition ! NebrMate I E Hall Private r ; i NnArrh. Hall ffkr" Li" L ' lllWJ r j" Historical Sot x- OT- property X . ) irn il i ii Hall " SggpEtm. Apl. tt g-jlHi l R Street , .2 Sj.t., , . 1 t "I il in ui : f t - ol j ii I ' Music Bldg. I 1 RM.I jljL1 II Us H S TnT 5 ftf( Salvation Q Army Q Str-el . 1 ii t r w f If 1 INU Gmcfuafe To Present Talk on Ceylon A travelogue. "Highlights of Three Years in Ceylon and India," will be presented on Thursday, at 4 p.m. by the Talks and Topics Committee of the Union. The program will be held in Room 316 of the Union. Mrs. Martha Ivaldy, a graduate of the University, will show films which she took in Ceylon and will speak about her adventures there. Mrs. Ivaldy went to Ceylon in 1953 as a documentary photogra pher, working for several Euro pean countries. Her assignments took her many places where she had an opportunity to take pictures of different phases of Celonese life. Many of the things she saw and photographed have never be fore been shown to an outsider. Mrs. Ivaldy took lessons in Sin halese, the most wide-spread Cey that her scquaintances with the village headmen, priests, traders, and working women as a result of knowing this language were some of the things she enjoyed most alfout her job. Her pictures reflect the intimate acquaintance ship with the lives of the various kinds of people in an "Asian Paradise." Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star taw Student Gets $5,000 Fellowship One of the nation's best fellow ships in criminal law and admin istration is being awarded to a Uni versity honor student, Willard "Bill"Lorensen, 26. The fellowship, granted by the University of Pennsylvania Law School in Philadelphia, provides $4, 000 plus about $1,000 in tuition fees for a year of graduate study and research. Lorensen, top man scholastic ally in the 1957 Nebraska law class, will be able to use the fellowship to complete most of the work re quired for a Doctor of Jurisprude degree. Bill is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J P. Lorensen of York, and a graduate of York high school. He recejved his undergraduate degree at the University in 1932, served two years in the army, and re turned to study law in 1954. He is currently editor of The Nebraska Law Review, a profes sional publication sponsored by the Nebraska Bar Association and the College of Law. Field Open: Hanks Of 'Pseudos' Expand On Campii June Publishing Class Slated College Republican Clubs To Meet Here Campus Young Republicans will hold a workshop session on Monday with other state college Young Republicans clubs. The meeting will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. in room 315 of the Union. Students from Young Republican clubs at the University of Omaha, Creighton University, Dana College, Fairbury College, Nebraska Wes leyan University, and the Univer sity will participate. If you have at last decided that you too wish to join the growing ranks of campus pseudos, thisMs for you. But before we come down to a practical discussion of what it takes, let's first examine the m'ord. There is a controversy as to bow it should be pronounced. Some hold for "Pa-sway-do" or p-sway-3o as in "blue psuede shoes". The majority though seem to favor "sue-dough". Anyway it's short for pseudo-intellectual. In other words, a false or imitation intellectual. Now a necessary part of being intellectual is having intelligence, in other words, ,knowing- some thing. So a pseudo is a person who pretends to know something. But if he did know something, he wouldn't have to pretend, so he obviously knows nothing. What's the point of all this? It just goes to show that anyone can be a pseudo. If intelligence or knowledge isn't required, the field is wide open. You too can be a pseudo. Don't let them tell you that you have to be in Arts and Sciences. Even Biz Ad men ought to be able to fulfill the above require ments. Now that yoii have made up your mind, you will wonder just how you go about it. I am going to give you a few examples of the pseudo in action. Suppose you walk into a group and the conversation is about lit erature. Don't let the fact that you Etopped reading when you finished the Hardy Boy series stop you. Chances are that the others stopped with Raggedy Ann. Wait for an opening and say something like "What did you think of Jean Paul Satre's last book?" I guaran tee that this will stop all but the cleverest. But justHn casejou.run into some old pro who comes back with "Very interesting, but do you real ly think he justifies his conclu sions?," all you have to do is shrug your shoulders, say "Oh well, you know how these French intellectuals are". Another example. Suppose the talk is about modern art. Just say, "Now take Picasso. Of course his technique is excellent, but do you really think he has the spirit of the art?" What could anyone pos sibly say to a remark like that? One thing to remember. If the majority likes something, you are against it. The majority can be referred to as the "peasants," the "Herd," or "the great unwashed." You can even take a chance on "other-directed" which has the added advantage that they may not know what "other-directed peo ple" are. If they are foolish enough to ask, just give them that "where have - you - been - for - the - past eighteen - years?" stare. They won't press the point. Now that you have these few hints, you ought to be able to take it from there. Use your imagina tion and you can come up with dozens of more genuine pseudo remarks. use j-p i! t 7 '"' 'llifo """ i --.& . The tenth annual Radcliffe Publishing Procedures Course will be held in Cambridge from June 19 to July 30, the purpose is to pro vide a "basic training" course in the various techniques of publish ing to college graduates. Among the special lecturers are Edward Weeks, editor of "The Atlantic Monthly, Stewart Beach, executive editor, "This Week"; Austin Kiplinger, executive editor, Kiplinger's "Changing Times"; W. Fireside Chats The Student YWCA discussed plans for co-sponsoring "fire-side chats, which are discussions De tween facultv members and stu dents, at the Wednesday afternoon meeting in the Union. PhvlliS Bonner. YWCA. and Bob Martel, YMCA, chairman of their respective committees are work in? nn tilan to contact deDart- ment heads for suggestions and possible laculty volunteers. Bradford Wiley, president, John Wiley and Sons; John O'Connor, president, Grossett and Dunlap; Evan Thomas, managing editor, Harper and Brothers; and William Sloane, director, Rutgers Uni versity Press. A special magazine workshop will be run by members of Life Magazine's staff; George Hunt, as sistant managing editor, and Bernard Quint, associate art direc tor. Burton Stratton of Harvard University Press will conduct a special section on type, printing, paper, binding and other produc tion matters. The course is open to recent col lege .graduates, both men and women. Enrollment is limited, and applications , must be received before May 15. Inquiries should be sent to Helen D. Venn, director publishing Procedures Course, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Mass. Phalanx Pledges Five Phalanx, professional military fraternity, pledged the following ROTC cadets on March 4th: Rich ard Tempero. William Johnston. Gary Claussen, James Peterson, and Jerry Leadabrand. SATCHMO Louis Armstrong - and hit All Stars Concert coming to LINCOLN N Pershing Municipal Auditorium MARCH 22 8:30 P.M. Tickets: $2.50, $2.00, $1.50, $1.25 ORDER NOW! Send rherk or money order tt Mamiied wtl-addresitrd envelope l IVrvhinn Municipal Auditorium. Bos fee wn flail, eseept Sunday, ta P M. VICE VERSA Out after a deer? Of course you know You must get a license Before you go! Oh! After a dear. Then it's reversed. Never mind the license Catch the dear first! MORAU Big game hunters, attention take your pleasure BIG! Smoke a regal Chesterfield King and get mare of whai you're smoking for. Majestic length plus the smoothest natural tobacco filter. Chesterfield the smoothest tasting smoke today because it's packed more smoothly by ACCU.RAY! Lik your pUasur BIG? Chstrfild King has Everything! '$50 fun a Jerry A. Byt, Cot College, far hit Chetter FieU poem. $50 for every ph iloeophir-al verwe accepted for publica tion. Cheeter field, P.O. Box SI, Hew York 46, N. Y. OUnuttimTiitMifc ' 1 - - "rrrasiM- y CiiYiroP' -w. -v tfi.-f.it. Ave.- -aw IB m CJievy is America's "hot car -officially! . .... ..'6' 4. i fillip' M-tltCTRIC SHAVE tOTlON PftE-EillCTftlC SHAVE. LOTION to get a bettor shave I Quicker . . . closer . . . smoother . . . no matter what machine you use. 1.00 etui aa SHULTON NawYork Toronto k 'AH 1 ' 4 my iili ,v4- :ffi j r i -ft r.l Iff '74 Chevrolet Wine CoVetod Manufacturers' Trophy at Day lona Beach aa 'best performing U. S. automobile'! Want facts about performance? Then look at the official figures from NASCAR's internationally famous Daytona Beach competition for stock cars. Here's what youll find: Chev rolet, in two weeks of blistering com petition, proved itself as America's Number One performance car. Nothing in the low-price field could touch it- No other car, regardless o) prve, scored such a sweep. And Chevy walked away with the famous Manu facturers' Trophy, hands down! The 1957 Chevrolet is, by all odds, the most astonishing performer ever ' produced in the low-price field. Best of all, this superiority isn't limited to just a few extra-cost high-performance models. -Every type of Chevy from the six-cylinder models right up to the 283-horsepower "Super Turbo-Fire" V8's, from the single-carburetor V8's with Powerglide to the stick-shift "270's" is a championship car. Natiomi Amedatienfor Sleek Cm Ao Kocmt, COME IN NOW GET A WINNING DEAL ON THE CHAMPION! 0 CHEVROLET A J Only Jronchiscd Chevrolet dealerg jEL """SSW display this famous trademn z l j I i See Your Authorized Chevrolet D Ver 4 i