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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1964)
HOMECOMING PETITION (Freshmen Only) I.hereby petition for the chairmanship of the . committee. COMMITTEES (Choose One) FINANCE BUTTONS DANCE and CONCERT PROMOTIONS TRADITIONS QUEEN SELECTION SECRETARY Name: Living Unit: . . Ext. G.P.A. Interviews will be conducted starting Monday night. May 25. Each petitioner will be notified. Suggestions: Cut out and turn in at box in front of 301 SU by 5:00 p m. May 23 Economics Professor On English Tour Raymond F. Mikesell, professor of economics, has been lecturing during the first week in May at universities and colleges in Eng land. Mikesell is on leave from the Vniversity during spring and sum mer term. Ills spring headquar ters are Geneva, Switzerland, where he is a visiting professor at the Graduate Institute of In ternational Studies. HEATH’S IW Eairraid Empire's foremost fashion fab ric specialty store. • Quality • Selection • Service fr f O SC Alt STRAUSS leath’sssE 878 Willamette Next to First National Bank w 0 N D I R F A B R I c s On May 4, Mikesell lectured at the Christ Church and All SouLs College, Oxford University. He discussed balance of payments problems and development, with ! observations on his Latin Ameri can experiences. He also spoke on "The Problem of Stabilizing Ex port Proceeds of Developing Countries.” Mikesell spoke at the London School of Economics on *‘U. S. Trade Policies in the European Economic Community” May 5. Journalism Fund Originator Dies T. Neil Taylor, 1931 graduate of the University School of Jour nalism, died May 12 in Oakland, California. Taylor was born August 31, 1900, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He is survived by his widow, the former Dorothy Thomas of Port land, who was also a 1931 gradu ate of the School of Journalism, and a daughter, Patricia, who graduated from the University in 1963. In 1939, Taylor established an endowment fund for the School of Journalism. He had contributed more than $4,000 in annual awards to graduating journalism seniors whose baccalaureate thes es have been judged best of the year. TODAY’S STAFF Night Editor—Irma Dawn Moar, Phyllis Elving Desk Editor—Mark Miller Reporters — Alice Kaseberg, Ronald Coleman, Rich Babow, Sandi Genser, Jim Moznctte. Proofreader—Phyllis Meyers . GERMAN 1 AUTO SERVICE Volkswagen Specialists • FACTORY TRAINED IN GERMANY • WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED O LOW REPAIR CHARGES • FULLY EQUIPPED TO HANDLE ALL GERMAN MAKES 2045 Franklin Blvd. Dl 2-2912 Chinese Scholar to Lecture i ne chairman or the depart ment of foreign languages at San Francisco State College, Kai-Yu Hsu, will speak on "Nature and Man in Chinese Poetry” at 8 p.m. today in the Student Union. Hsu, who received his Master of Arts degree in journalism from the University, comes here I under the sponsorship of the East! Asian Studies program. His lec ture is open to the public. Project Director A graduate of National Tsing Hua University in China, Hsu ] came to this country following! Smoking Motor Brings Firemen Smoke on the second floor of Lawrence Hall brought Eugene , firemen with their truck and fold-; ing ladder at 9 p.m Wednesday After checking neon lights and the ventilation system, the fire men shut off a hot motor in the attic over room 207. This caused the smoke to stop. Ted Schneider, working in the co-op branch downstairs, reported the fire scare when he smelled the strong odor of hot wiring. About 25 architecture students 1 milled around in a jovial mood as j the search for smoke progressed. .Someone put on coffee for the wait. i Finally, most everybody went1 home when the motor and smoke stopped. SU Calendar Thursday, May 21. 1964 7 :30 i m. to 11:00 p m. 8 00 -Continuing Legal Educ Conf Registration. Lobby, SU 2nd flr 10:00- SU Staff 10* SU Keller Lecture Museum of Art J1 :0O Russian Table 1 SU Noon I Jilin Table 1 SU Japanese Table 1 SU Continuing Legal Lilac Luncheon 108 SU Mineral I-aw 109 SU 1 :00~-SU Publicity Comm Interview*. 308 SU SU Arti Comm Jntervwa 308C SU 3:00 Student Conduct Comm 10! SU 4:00 Jr. Class Council 110 SU Kwama 214 SU Phi Theta Upsilnn 315 SU 6:00 I.E.C. Anniversary 113 SU 6:15— SU Rec Clwiic Comm Interview* 308C SU 6:30— People to people Comm 1 SU APO Meeting 15 SU ASUO Senate 101 SU Angel Flight Business Meet 108 SU SU Movie Comm Intervw« 308 SU 6 45—Alpine Club 30 Sci 7 ;00—SU Dance Comm Intcrvw* Bottom of Bowl SU SU People-to-People Comm Interviews 1 SU A.C.E. 115 SU OCC Service Comm 117 SU Forum Interviews 308 SU 7:30- Cjrad Sociology Forum 110 SU City Panbellenic 111 SU Carson Student Court 213 SIT Art Film lecture 334 SU 8:00 Chinese Poetry I-ccture 112 SU Univ Symphonic Band Concert Ballroom SU Clifton-Taylor Lecture- AAA 123 Sci 3rd Stream Theatre AT Sigma Delta Chi Allen Rm, AUcn Ichthus Christian Ecumenical 9:30 Dialogue 315 SU World War II and attended the University. He received his Doc tor of Philosophy degree in mod ern Chinese thought and litera ture from Stanford University. Hsu has been on the faculty of San Francisco State since 1959 and has been chairman of his de partment since 1960. He is also director of the Chinese-Mandarin Teaching Materials Development Project, the Carnegie Chinese Project, the Foreign Languages i Institutes in Spanish, Mandarin Chinese and Russian, and of Area : Studies at San Francisco State. During World War II, Hsu was | liaison officer for the Chinese Army, assigned to work with the US Army in the China-Burma India Theater. Later he was the chief interpreter for the Chinese Air Force Detatchment in the US. In 1946 he became a military aide for the Chinese embassy in ! Washington, D.C., and was on a tour of duty in Europe. Folloging his studies at Ore-1 f ."r" ===== lion, Hsu was, from 1948 to 1952* reporter, foreign news editor and associate editor of the San Fran ciaco Chinese World Daily. A writer who has published widely in professional and learn ed journals, as well as general circulation media, Hsu is the author of Twentieth Century Chinese Poetry,” published by Doublcday in 1963. 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