"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1953-10-06"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0124984/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " KISSING BOOTH UNNECESSARY\nBlood Drive Opens With Impressive Total\nBy UBYSSEY STAFF REPORTER\nA crack publicity stunt dreamed up to\npromote the blood drive isn't even going to\nbe needed, it seems. The drive is already\na success.\nMonday was only opening day, but if\nthe swarms of students who appeared at\nthe armouries are any indication, the drive\nwill probably be the most successful ever\nstaged at UBC.\nA kissing booth stocked with beautiful\nnurses will be set up at the clinic Thursday, kisses selling for a pint of blood each,\nbut the booth will be only so much decoration.\nBecause the crowds of donors who turn-\nned up at the clinic opening day necessitated the following emergency measures:\nA long double line (unique at UBC); an\nextra hour beyond the 4:30 closing time to\nhandle all queued donors; and extra beds\nhastily set up to take care of the rush.\n f\t\nAt the end of the day, a total of 421 the upperclassmen, and claim they'll show\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Photo by Joe Quan\ndonors had gone through the clinic\u00E2\u0080\u0094nearly\ntwice the minimum 251) pinls a day.\nAll a far cry from the spring drive of\nlast session, when the drive bogged down\nwhen only half-finished, and nurses threatened to pack up and leave unless students\nco-operated.\nCo-chairmen Joyce Thompson and June\nWalker were overwhelmed by the reception given the joint Home Ec-Nurses-spon-\nsored drive.\n\"If this rush continues, Red Cross will\nhave no worries on our account,\" said June\nWalker happily.\n\"But this had better continue,\" she\nnddt-d. \"There's a shortage of blood in B.C.,\nand we've got to maintain the good record.\"\nMeanwhile, the drive is being sparked\nby u blood battle between students in Applied Science und Frosh.\nThe Frosh have issued a challenge to\nFaculty of Applied Science bow to j^ivo\nblood.\nTo date the Frosh are making good their\nword. A total of 85 Frosh have given\nblood, while their rivals have parted with\nonly 56 pints. ,\nThe day-end standing showed Artsmen\nleading the pack wilh 94 pints. Other standings were as follows: Faculties of Forestry\nand Agriculture tied for second place with\n23 pints each; Pre-Med, 17; Medicine, 14;\nLaw, 14; Architecture, 6; Home Economics,\n8; Nursing, 5; and Physical Education und\nTeacher Training with 2 pints apiece.\nSometime this week the 15,000th donor\nwill pass through the clinic, and will be\nawarded a \"mystery prize\" for his pint.\nThat same pint will bring the value of\nblood given at UBC so far to $375,000 at\n$25 a pint.\nThat isn't a small gift. And we can\nmake it bigger.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVOLUME XXXVI\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1953\nPRICE 5c; No. 6\nCollection Of Fee Hike May Be Delayed\nPost Won\nBy O'Shea\nOn Birthdy\nElection as second member\nat large, on student council, a\nnew fur cape and a twenty-\nfirst birthday made a big weekend for Ken O'Shea.\nO'Shea won the Council position late Friday when returning\noffioers took ttUbbaUat. to third,\ncount, giving O'Shea a 71-vote\nlead over BUI Tracey's poll of\n601, despite Tracey'* lead on the\nfirst count.\nELIMINATED\nCandidates John Redekop and\nJean Taylor were eliminated on\nthe first and second counts, respectively.\nBut being elected to Student\nCouncil wasn't enough for O'Shea. He also managed to win\nthe raffle prize\u00E2\u0080\u0094a fur cape\u00E2\u0080\u0094at\nGamma Phi Beta and Kappa\nKappa Gamma's Cotton Ball the\nsame night, without even attending the affair.\nON BIRTHDAY\nAnd all on his twenty-first\nbirthday.\nHere are the first-count standings in the election: Tracey, 461;\nO'Shea, 442; Taylor 414; and\nRedekop, 223.\nUniversity\nTo Honor\nLeaders\nManufacturing, labor and agriculture will be honored at\ncongregation ceremonies here\non Oct. 30.\nHonorary degrees to leaders\nin three branches of industry\nwill be presented, and more\nthan 250 academic degrees will\nbe conferred to graduate and\npost-graduate students during\nthe annual ceremony.\nDelivering the congregational\naddress, Rhys M. Sale, president\nof Ford Motor Company of Canada, will also be presented an\nhonorary doctorate of Laws in\nrecognition of his leadership in\nmanufacturing.\nLabour leader Percy Bfen-\ntfotigh. president of the Trades\nand Labour Congress, will receive an honorary LLD.\n\"Dean of B.C. ctMtlemcn,\"\nLaurence Guichon, will be given\nan honorary doctorate of \u00C2\u00BBci.\nence.\nCeremony will be held in the\nwomen's gymnasium. Students\nwill inarch to thc gym from the\nauditorium, and facility mem\nhers from the Mrock Hall\nIteeepiion will be held\nUrock Hall after thc ceremony, new location.\nUBC SYMPHONY BEING FORMED\nTO PLAY AT SATURDAY GAME\nIf you are one of the 3500 slightly disgusted fans at\nthe game Saturday who wondered where the UBC Band\nwas\u00E2\u0080\u0094it wasn't. But you can make sure Birds will have\nsome support at this week's game.\nA UBC Simphony Sextette is being formed and anyone who can make a noise on an instrument is invited to\njoin in. The group will be playing in the students' section\non Saturday. Kitsilano Boys' Band, just returned from\nEngland, will be in the main grandstand to fill in between\nthe Sextette's numbers.\nAnyone interested contact Des Eadie or Athletic\nDirector put Phillips at the gym. '\"'\"*\"\nUBCHas\nControl\nOf Pool\nNo guarantees as to the\nfuture of the swimming pool\nhave been given to the British\nEmpire Games Committee by\nuniversity officials, President\nMackenzie told The Ubyssey\nyesterday.\nUBC has only promised that\nif the pool is built on the campus, the university will maintain\nit. open it for the use of outside\norganizations under the same\nregulations as those applicable\nto other university facilities such\n... as the gymnasium and Brock\nFrosh Undergraduate Society has denounced the Lambda ,lall saic| Dl. jviackenzip.\nChi \"freshette\" queen, and announced they will shortly choose\no queen of their own. ** ~~~\nLambda Chi Frosh Queen\nDenounced By Freshmen\nMove came Monday at FUS's\nfirst meeting of the session,\nspearheaded by newly \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 elected\npresident Phil Greenberg.\n\"Lambda Chi queen is not a\nfrosh queen,\" caid Greenberg.\n\"We're going to pick our own.\"\nMeeting of frosh representatives voted with Greenberg, then\nlaid plans to pick a \"Frosh Princess\" In the near future.\nFrosh council members were\nalso told of a challenge issued\nto students in Engineering,\nwhich calls for a blood race, \"to\nprove that the Frosh have more\nbloody spirit than the Engineers.\"\nA long agenda forced the\nFrosh to continue their meeting\ntoday at noon in Arts 104.\nCollege Shop\nRe-opens\nAMS College Shop re-opens\nthis fall in a permanent location\nwith an increased array of\nstock.\nIn addition to the previously\ncarried stock of faculty pins,\ncrests, sweaters and decals, thc\nCollege Shop will be handling\nT-Shirts, mugs and other goods.\nAs well as offering a greater\nvariety of stock, thc College\nShop will be in a new location\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the room in the south-east\ncorner of the Brock, next to the\nAMS office. This room will\nalso house the Campus Lost and\nFound.\nArts Society\nDissolved\nBy Executive\nArts undergraduate society\ndied Saturday, October 3.\nA press release from J. S. An-\ntrobus, AUS vice-president,\ndated Oct. 3, reports a decision\nto dissolve the organization.\n\"Executive has concluded\nthat although the organization\nhas in the past successfully filled a vital place in the social life\nof the 'Arts' students, its functions have now been duplicated\nand even more adequately carried out by the smaller university clubs,\" release states.\nDifficulty of developing \"a\ncorporate feeling among the arts\nstudents\" was given by the executive as a main reason for tho\nintention to dissolve.\nExecutive decided student\nbody should \"be no longer burdened with the responsibilities\nof an organization whose reason\nfor existence in contemporary j heavily towards the War Memo-i\nstudent life is invalid.\" j rial Gymnasium,\" he said.\nAT DISCRETION\n\"Thc roofing of the structure\nwill be left entirely at the discretion of the university,\" he\nstressed.\n\"The main consideration behind the BEG Committee's decision to build the pool on the\ncampus is the fact that UBC is\nconsidered the most favorable\nsite,\" he said.\n\"After the games the pool will\nrevert to the university and consequently tho needs and interests of the students and stall\nwill hav.e to come first.\"\n\"We have made no commit\nments other than assurances that\nNO COMMITMENTS\nwe shall maintain the pool and\nroof it if possible,\" Dr. Mackenzie said.\nHe pointed out that the roof-\nin!? of the pool will present a\nserious problem as thc 50-meter\nOlympic length pool will be too\nlong for normal year 'round operations.\nAsked whether an appeal will\nbe made to the students to help\nfinance the new pool, Dr. Mackenzie said he hoped it will not\nbo necessary.\nALREADY CONTRIBUTED\n\"The students of this university have already contributed\n... Dr. John W. Grant\nChristianity\nTo Be Topic\nOf Talk Series\nA Union College professor\nwill begin a series of noon lectures today under the sponsorship of the President's Committee on Spiritual Values.\nHe is Dr. John W. Grant, Professor of Church History at the\ntheological school, whose lecture\ntheme will be \"The Influence of\nChristianity Upon European\nCivilization.\"\nThe lectures will be held on\nTuesdays and Fridays in Arts\n206 at 12.30.\nDr. Grant's lectures will deal\nwith \"the growth of the Christian movement in the ancient\nworld, its transformation of Roman society, and its consolidation in the Middle Ages.\"\nLectures will discuss the influence of Christianity upon the\nsocial and economic forms, political institutions, and intellectual life of modern capitalist\ncultue.\nRhodes Scholars\nWill Be Chosen\nRhodes scholarship is now\nopen to University students in\nBritish Columbia. Thc scholars-hip will be awarded in early\nDecember. This was announced\nby Dean Walter Gage.\nThis scholarship is tenable at\nthe University of Oxford. Students may choose their own\ncourses.\nBoard Of Governors\nMay Wait Until Fall\nBy BRUCE McWILLlAMS\nThe AMS $2 fee hike approved by students Friday may\nnot go into effect this session.\nAMS Treasurer Allan Gold\"\nsmith announced yesterday that\n-ince the University Administration \"collects the money,\" finai\ndecision as to whether it will\ncollect the Increase after Christmas rests with administration.\nGoldsmith said Student Council will request the Board of\nGovernors to levy the fee immediately, and collect it with spring\nterm fees. Those who paid their\nfull fees during registration\nwould be billed for the addition-\n:.l $2.\nSMALL VOTE\nThe fee boost was approved\nby 1200 of the 1600 students who\nvoted Friday, giving it it's necessary two-thirds majority. Only\n23 percent of the enrollment\nvoted on the issue.\n'twtn clouts\nSCM Presents\nNew Talk Series\nSLAVONIC CIRCLE will hold\na general meeting in FG 100 on\nFriday at 12.30, after which Mr.\nWainman will speak on his trip\nto Yugoslavia.\n*P *P Bp\nDUNKING WANTED\nApplied Science Split Looms\nBut the Shop will be opcral\ning temporarily in its former |\nlocation -the AMS office in thei\nBrock until the appointment i\ni of a .student manager, when it\nin will commence business in its\nBy PETE PINEO\nFirst official signs of the\nbrewing rebellion among the\nrank-and-file applied science\nstudents against their \"no lilypond\" leadership developed\nin the la.-,t Wednesday meeting\nof the applied science undergraduate society.\nStudents a I I e n d i n s> this\nmoelin.u voted unanimously,\nand without discussion, \"to\ndisco.-- freshman ha/in.', al the\nnext yeiicral tneeliiu-'..\"\nUnder the surface, Ilii.-. nm-\n| tion was an echo of thc 'next\nyear the Lilypond\" cry with\nwhich the students of applied\nscience defended themselves\nagainst a freshman attack on\nSept. 2'.).\nAl this lime, the officiality\nof the cry was holly denied by\nMonte McKay, vice-president\nof Ihe association, who will\nprobably be main tarijci of\nI he students' dissatisl'acl ion.\nPassin.<;' of Ihe motion asking lor discussion indicates\nlhal tin's dissatisfaction will be\nlull> aired in Ihe next moot\niutj. Probably students will\n\"But It's up to the Board of\nGovernors,\" Goldsmith stressed.\n\"They might decide to wait until next session to collect it.\"\nBoard of Governors meets Oct.\n2.1 and their decision on the\nmatter will not he known until\nthat time. It is known that the\nBoard has been reluctant in past\nyears to increase fees in the\nmiddle of the year because the\namount would be different from\nthat stated in the calendar,\nPOINT TO NECESSITY\nStudent council will point out\nto the board the necessity of having the extra $10,000 this year,\nbut if the Board decides to wait\nuntil next fall, Goldsmith's austerity budget will remain in effect.\nBenefits which will result\nfrom this increase arc many: By\napproving the increase students\nnave larger Krauts to the four\norganizations hardest hit by the\n.-.mailer budget: Literary and\n.Scientific Executive, Undergraduate Societies, Women's Athletics Directorate and the Publications Board.\nFRENCH CHOIR will have\nits first practice in HG 4 on Friday, noon.. All new members\nwelcome.\n# ft* #\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nAssn. (Student Branch) presents Canadian Orientation Series from Oct. 13-16, in Phys.\n200. The speakers will be Prof.\nDavies, Mr. McLeish, Mr. Cor-\nbett and Mr. Barton. All students and faculty members are\ninvited.\nH> if* >f.\nCAMERA CLUB will hold a\ngeneral meeting in Library Km.\n859 on Friday, at 12.30.\nif. if. ff,\nLIBERAL CLUB welcomes\nprospective members to a general meeting in Arts 201, on Oct.\n19 at 12.30. Today, at noon in\nArts 100, Mr. Elmore Philpot\nwill speak on \"Live Liberalism.\"\nPRESIDENT'S COMMITTEE\non Spiritual Values presents a\nseries of ten lectures on \"The\nInfluence of Christianity on\nEuropean Civilization.\" The lectures will be given on Tuesdays\nand Fridays al noon in Ails 20(>.\n* * -Y-\nSTUDENT CHRISTIAN movement presents two new Study\nGroups, beginning this week.\n\"Humanism: Is Man the Measure\nof All Things'.'\" today at 3 .30,\nby Dr. Stanley Packham. \"Kec-\norils of Ihe Life of Jesus,\" tomorrow al 3.30 by the Hcv. V.\n11, Birdsail. Both will be in the\nSCM Boom, if 12 Auditorium.\nContinued on page 3\nSee 'Tween Classes\njust reprimand McKay, although impeachment may result.\nAnother head that may fall\nis Horhio Stephens for his official support of Ihe \"no Lilypond policy\" utii'H he attempted to break up the slrufJK'lo |\nou Arts lawn. Sept. 2'.\.\nIronically, the motion came j\nimmediately after William\nTraces iv.ul minute 3:>, of last |\niVIonda.s 's e o u ii c i 1 meet im; j\nwhich rendered thanks to\nLaw an.I Applied Science for\nthe sute and i^ane oriental ion\nBURSARY CARDS A VAILABLE\nAT REGISTRAR'S OFFICE NOW\nWinners of .scholarships and bursaries should call al\nthe Registrar's office for their scholrship cards, the Registrar has announced.\nAll scholarship winners except holders ol special bursaries and Dominion-provincial youth training Inn.aim-,\nare required to fill ou! these cards before chocks are i-\nsued, the announcement added.\nScholarship holders must e,el then caul, smne.l |,v\ntheir instructors and reluiti lliem l<> the .'lecnuilnm ollne\n(^rfsaiiAA-^ PAGE TWO\nTBE UBYSSEY\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nAuthorized as second Class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nStudent subscriptions $1.2? per year (included in AMS fees). Mail subscriptions $2 per year. Single copielfive cents. Published in Vancouver throughout the\nUniversity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society,\nUniversity ol British Columbif. Editorial opinions expressed herein are those of\nthe editorial staff of The Ubypey, and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater\nSociety or the University. Letters to the Editor should not be more than 150 words.\nThe Ubyssey reserves the rigWt to cut letters, and cannot guarantee publication\nof ali letters received.\nOffices in Brock Hall For Display Advertising\nPhone ALma 1824 Phone ALma 3253\nEDITOR-IN-CHIEF ---, ALLAN rOTHERINQHAM\nManaging Editor *-. ptttt Sypnowlch\nExecutive Edior. Jeromt Angel city Editor. Ed Parker\nWomen's Editor, Helen Ponnelly Photo Editor, Bob Kendrick\nSenior Editor, this \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBu|- .Charlie Watt\nReporters: Pete Pineo, Ra| Logie, Bruce McWilliams, Dick Dolman, Valerie\nGartsim, Pat Barrett, Bob Bridge, Pat Carney, Bert Gordon, Mary Lou Siems, Ab\nKent, Murray Brisker, Rosemgry Kent-Barber, John Gillingha i, Ken Lamb.\nSports Reporters: Stan Beck, Mike Glaspie.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, October 6,1953\nMore Money Needed For Higher Education\nFee Increase\nHurrah.\nLearning To Think\nThe faculty of arts is suffering from a\nchronic inferiority complex. Artsmen don't\neven appear to know that the classic reply to\nthe traditional criticism \"Arts bake no bread''\nis \"man cannot live by bread alone.\" Or\nthat there is an old Chinese proverb to the\neffect that if you have a loaf of bread sell\nhalf of it and buy flowers.\nA major flaw in our culture is that we\ntend to judge everything by the financial returns and lose sight of intrinsic values. The\njibe that an artsman can always get a job in\na pyjama factory if he knows how to pull\nstrings, is taken too seriously.\nOne of the functions of a university appears to be the preparation of students to earn\na living. The faculty of arts is not neglecting\nthat function\u00E2\u0080\u0094preparing students for teaching, law, medicine, theology, journalism, and\nother professions which may or may not require further education. A \"general education,\" that is, an arts degree, is valued and\nrespected in many fields of business.\nBut there is another important purpose,\nsometimes called learning how to think, and\nsometimes called civilizing. Perhaps a better\nway of phrasing it is developing a sense of\nvalues. If an artsman does anything more\nthan recopy half-remembered lecture notes\nin an examination book, he should learn to\nquestion dogmas and implicit assumptions\nwherever they are found.\nHe should learn to develop his own ideas\nbased on rationality and tolerance rather\nthan prejudice. He should refuse to accept\nconventional standards of values for the sake\nof conforming, but should consider all standards by their worth and strive for improvement.\nThis is difficult when the standards set\nby the faculty appear to approve rote learning rather than cultural development. Nevertheless, there is a good opportunity for this\ntype of advancement,In the faculty of arts.\nIf a student studies his courses with a clear\nconception of what values he hopes to obtain\nfrom them, he can develop a critical approach\nand develop a satisfactory sense of values.\nJoe Takes A Wife\nSenator Joseph McCarthy must have had\na beautiful honeymoon hugging the front\npages of a continent's newspapers.\nNow that McCarthy has finally pronounced his fairy tale of Beria's escape u\nhoax, ho may have more time to devote himself to his new and, we understand, beautiful\nbride.\nAll in all it is a typical \"American success story.\" Successful and eligible bachelor-\ngets beautiful girl (or is it the other way\naround?). Unfortunately, McCarthy has added another myth to the rather more ancient\nAmerican fairy tales.\nMillions across the ocean who have ceased to believe that this continent's streets\nar paved with gold and millions of others\nwho have corrected their impression of Amc-\nGuest Editorial\nAt the general meeiing of the AMS last\nThursday, a motion proposed by Roy Officer\nand Howard Turpin of the Student Christian Movement, recommending that we urge\nNFCUS to begin negotiations towards associate membership in IUS, was quickly and\nthoroughly quashed on the grounds of being\n'impractical' and 'idealistic'.\nIf anyone is unrealistic, we feel it. is thoso\nso violently opposed to the S.C.M. stand.\nThe most critical issue in the world today is\nEast-West tension, which feeds upon and\nbreeds misunderstanding and prejudice. A\nprimary task of NFCUS, our National student\norganization, therefore, is to pursue a policy\nsuch as to lessen, not heighten, this tension.\nIUS is at present pursuing a policy of\nfriendly overtures towards the Western\nstudent; constituency. There are two fallacies\npossible in appraising this drastic change of\nattitude. It would bo silly to sec it as a pure\nexpression of warm brotherhood, rather than\nas a strategy of world Communism. At the\nsame time it is equally unrealistic, although\ncomforting to our egos, to dismiss the IUS\nleaders as impersonal Marxist 'units' rather\nthan as persons, not unlike ourselves, but\nwith a distinctively different viewpoim. As\nhuman beings, a real desire for reconciliation\ncannot, be totally absent from their motivation.\nThus, wc .should think, the NFCUS nlli-\nrica as a country of cops and gangsters\n(rather more of the gangsters), have now\ngained the impression from Senator McCarthy's recent meteoric rise that America is\ngripped in a \"reign of terror\", a concept which\nis pregnant with meaning in other parts of\ntin,' world.\nEven if McCarthy had attained all he\nand hi.s supporters claim he has; even if he had\nuprooted the last remaining communist in the\nU.S., all these acts cannot counterbalance\nthe harm he has done to the good name of\ndemocracy, liberalism, western liberties and\na host of other cotipenhhse eakhwc v eant F\na host of other concepts which have taken\non a hollow sound to those who have in their\nown countries seen the distortions to which\nsuch terms can be subjected.\nlude lo IUS in the present situation must be\none of cautious acceptance of the overtures,\nfully recognizing their ambiguity. To draw\nback through fear of being 'uped' or exploited\nfor propaganda purposes is an admission of\nweakness rather than an intelligent strategy.\nWo cannot sit back, self-righteously, and demand 'demonstration of their good intentions',\nany more than we can rush blindly and joyfully into the relationship for the sake of\nthe lovely fellowship that is offered.\nSuch demonstration they will not give, in\nthe face of the sort of attitude that demands\nit. Our happy and delusive picture of the\nrighteous West over against the evil East does\nnot exist in their minds. We have given them\nample reason to distrust and hate us.\nIt would seem, therefore, that if Canadian students have any concern for the world\nsituation and any faith in their own political\ncompetence, they should urge that NFCUS\nbecome an associate member of IUS. This is\nno time lo moralize about the undisputably\npartisan policy pursued by IUS in the past,\nand to refuse to soil our lily-white hands.\nThe alternative to the suggested personal\ncontact with and confrontation of the Communist student constituency is to contribute,\nby our weak hesitancy, to the growth of\nmutual misunderstanding and distrust, raising it ever nearer to the explosive level.\nSTUDENT CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT\nEXECUTIVE,\nUnless more money is spent\non higher education during the\nnext few years the students of\nBritish Columbia will suffer\nfrom lack of adequate school\nfacilities and lack of first class\nteachers Dr. Norman MacKenzie, President of the University of British Columbia declared Sunday night in his annual radio report to the province.\nDr. MacKenzie spoke over a\nprovince-wide network of the\nCanadian Broadcasting Corporation.\nThe entire question of higher\neducation in the province will\nhave to be given careful study\nduring the next few years if\nthe University is to adequately\nmeet the demands which will\nbe made upon it.\n\"If our yc%ng people are to\nbe educated, if our citizens are\nto be provided with professional services, if our resources\nare to be intelligently exploit*\nUTTERS TO THE EDITOR\nPropaganda Tooli\nEditor, the Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nKen Farris, SCM head and\nMr. Hollands, SCP president,\nfailed to make UBC students\ninto fellow travellers of the\ncommunist lUS. Canadian NF\nCUS should not be associated\nwith IUS If they want to preserve the reputation of freedom in Canada and all over\nthe world. I would like to\ncongratulate the students and\nCouncil for turning down a request from SCM official to affiliate with communist-run\nIUS.\nLet our representatives give\nNFCUS to understand that\nUBC students do not want to\nbe a propaganda tool for Moscow agents in promoting misery and bloody revolution for\nthe enslavement of the free\nworld. It is a fact that IUS\nrepresents, only a small fraction of Iron Countries students,\nnamely hard-bitten communists of bolshevik calibre who\nare so anxious to bait peace-\nloving Canadian students for\nthe cause of red aggression and\nslavery.\nDoes Mr. iioiiands remember\nwhen IUS refused to protest\nagainst the prosecution and\nmassacre of Czeck students,\nwho fought so gallantly for\nuniversity and academic freedom? UBC students can not\nforget hot blood shed by young\nstudents at Prague. . The IUS\nrefusal mu3t serve as a real\nwarning to everybody; this is\nwhat IUS wishes to prepare for\nthe world-students' happiness.\nMr. Hollands :s eager to\nknow more about the people\nand students of Iron Curtain\nCountries and according to him\nthe only way to reach it is by\nrecognition of IUS. You can be\nsure Mr. Hollands that such\nsweet information can not be |\nachieved through the IUS un-'\nless you become an Oatis or n\nVolgar.\nM. R. TOMOUICH,\nApp. Sc, 3rd Year.\nAMS Not Bourgeois\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nThe effect of Friday's report-!\ning of my campaign speech is\nquite apparent.\nTo clarify the issue it should\nbe stated that I do not promise\nto \"end an array of bourgiou-\nsie, but to prevent it from coming into existence.\" I said,\n\"because of student apathy the\ndanger was quite real.\" In\nview of the fact that my speech\nwas written out and'in view of\nthc fact that I read it, the facts\ncannot be questioned.\nFurthermore, I turned to\nspeak specifically to Mr. Feltham and the council informing\nthem that I was not speaking\nof them but considering the\nfuture. Since most of those\npresent were quite clear on my\nposition, I cannot understand\nhow the Press so completely\nmisunderstood me.\nHowever, I wish to congratulate Mr. O'Shea, and wish\nhim much success in his new\noffice. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 JOHN REDEKOP\nFugitive*\nEditor, The Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nSeveral of us recently picked up the Alma Mater Society\nStudent Pan card complete\nwith those \"Oh no!!!\" pictures,\nand on receiving same practically decided not to present\nthem for reduced rates at the\nmovies (quite a decision you\nwill agree). Judging from the\ncomments from those around\nus in the line-up at the time,\nand later those voiced in the\nWestbrook Building the pictures make the average UBC\nstudent look like:\na) a fugitive from a gold fish\nbowl;\nb> a fugitive;\nc) a little one just ready for\nfirst day at school.\nNow I fully appreciate the\nfact that time is an important\nelement during registration\nand when students reach the\nphotographic dept. they may\nthink it is the only element. I\nalso appreciate that photographers are working under considerable presure, but really,\nit seems that the percentage of\ngood pictures (i.e. good for\nsomething other than laughs)\ncould have been increased.\nJ. HOPKINS,\nV Nursing\nAPOLOGY\nIt was reported in the Ubyssey Friday that Radsoc did\nnot cease their World Series\nbroadcast until 1:00 p.m. Radsoc was off the air at 12:30;\nthe Ubyssey regrets any inconvenience caused by last Friday's announcement.\ned and if our various needs are\nto be met and our desires satisfied we .will have to continue\nto spend considerable sums of\nmoney on this higher education.\" . .\nDr. MacKenzie said that\nwhile the legislature, the government and corporations and\nprivate individuals have been\ngenerous in the past after their\nown fashion still in terms of\npopulation and student enrollment less real money is being\ntion than was spent in the\nspent in B.C. on higher educa-\n1920's.\n\"Nothing is, in my opinion,\"\nsaid the UBG president, \"more\nfoolish than to send the ablest\nof our young people to be\ntaught and trained and inspired by the second rate.\"\nDr. MacKenzie reported that\nenrollment at UBC this year\nwas some 5500 students, two\nhundred more than a year ago.\nAbout half of these students\ncome from more than 200 centres throughout B.C., from all\nnine provinces and from some\n30 other countries throughout\nthe world.\nThirteen hundred of the students are women.\nEnrollment at the University\nis now twice that of pre-war\nyears, Dr. MacKenzie declared\nand by 1960 will reach at least\n10,000.\nPlans to meet this vastly increased enrollment should be\nmade now, he said, and it may\nnot be a complete answer to\nestablish junior colleges, vocational and agricultural schools,\nand decentralize teacher training and higher education.\nExperience' in the neighboring states of Washington and\nOregon and California, and in\n^ *'years of service\nto the university of\nbritish columbia,\nits fraternities\nand sororities.\nTHERE'S A REASON\nother Canadian provinces, have\nindicated that such solutions\nwould increase the cost of providing higher education and\nwould create difficulties in\nfinding sufficient trained personnel to staff such schools.\n\"Unless the libraries and\nlaboratories are adequate and\nthe cultural facilities extensive\nproper university training cannot be provided.\"\nDr. MacKenzie said that the\nUniversity of British Columbia\nnow provides residence for I\nabout 1200 of the students and \\nstaff but that only 150 of these j\nlive in suitable fire-resistant |\nbuildings.\n\"The rest are in converted j\narmy huts which have a very\nlimited period of usefulness\nand which are .a real and con-|\nstant fire hazard.\"\n\"It is neither good policy I\nnor good housekeeping to have[\nhundreds of thousands of dollars worth of equipment andl\nresearch work in buildings as|\ninflammable as these ere.\"\nTypewriters\nNew and Used\nSTUDENTS! Let me demon-\nstrate our new and used\nmodels in your own home at\nany hour of the day or evening.\nNESTOR ISSAKIDESI\nConsolidated Typewriters Ltd.\n416 Richards St.\nPhone MA. 80471\nSTATION IRY AND\nPRINTING CO. LTD.\n' Pftum OI7I\nTECHNICAL BOOKS\nWe are specialists ln the direst j\nimport of technical tad settn-\ntific literature, manuals, text*\nbooks, dictionaries, magnifies,\netc., from Germany, twitter*\nland, Sweden. Austria, Frtnet* [\nItaly and Holland. Ask us for\nany information about modern\nbooks from these countries.\nWe can giva you all details, j\nprice \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and we obtain your\nbooks quickly!\nContinents! 3ooV Centre\nThe Home of the European\nBook\n914 A W. PENDER\n(opposite Hotel Abbotsford)\nPhone PAclfie 4711\nCLASSIFIED\nWOULD FINDER OP ANY OF\n4 $10 bills lost al 5 wicket at\n'Birds vs. Cubs game please\ncontact Alma 0071. Reward.\nQUIET, CLEAN, GOOD FOOD,\nfor two sharing. IIA 7455-M\nMOTORCYCLE 1H52. BSA 250\nc.c. OHV, spring frame. Ex\nccllcnt condition. Winter driving outfit. $290. Evenings\nFA. 2M)6-L.\nLEICA III V. latest model, lens\n1:2, summitaf exposure 1 to\n1-1000th sec. Apply to II. E.\nTonne. 356T W. Ilth Avenue.\nTel CE. 0947.\nURGENTLY WANTED LATIN\nfundamentals. Please phone\nRosemary CE. 9544.\n1948 PLYMOUTH, HEATER\nseat covers, excellent condition. DE. 524H-M eves, or Box\n444, Abbotsford. ({)>\nDOUBLE &\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SINGLE itREAST-\nerl Tux, size JH) and tails, size\n37, all in good condition to fit\nmedium height. Telephone\nS. R. Gervin for appointment,\nMAiine 0191. U0)\nDurable Beauty For The Campus Miss\nf-TLW^\n&\n.^V.\nHP11! 'LLffiLU\n) .;v rum err1, '-j\n:'VJ Ln | |\nFALL KNITTED SUITS\n\u00C2\u00A3if $ant$ML\nYou'll love these knitted suits . . . the seamless\nshoulders . . looped-on ribbed cuffs to match\nlooped-on fitted waistband . . . the narrow silk-\nlined belt and double Lastex adjustable skirt band.\nSizes 14 to 20, many colors\n$3995\nUHC Ladies' Sportswear, Third Floor\nINCORPORATED V.\"\" MA', iG/O. Tuesday, October 6, 1953\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPAGE THREE\nPlayers Announce\nFall Productions\nTwo local directors will direct the Players Club annual fall\nplays, which will represent both classical and modern drama.\n $ Miss Dorothy Davies of the\nTokyo Post\nAccepted\nBy Librarian\nUBC assistant Librarian, Miss\nAnne M. Smith, has accepted a\nyear's appointment as professor\nin the Japan school of Librarian-\nship at Keio University.\nMiss Smith, assistant Librarian and head of reference and\ninformational services left Sept.\n3 for Keio University in Tokyo\nwhere she will teach courses in\nreference work and Library administration.\nDuring her absence, Miss\nSmith's position at the UBC\nLibrary will be filled by Joan\nO'Rourke.\nTotem and Avon theatres as well\nes the Theatre Under the Stars,\nwill direct an unabridged version of Shakespeare's \"Romeo\nend Juliet\". Mr. Sidney Risk of\nthe Everyman Theatre will direct the West Coast premiere of\nRobertson Davie's \"A Masque of\nAesop.\"\nAuditions will be held ln the\nAuditorium this Saturday starting at 12.30 and anyone interested is asked to attend. Tryouts\nare to continue during the following week and information is\navailable at Al. 3062.\nThe two directors will teach\nnew members of the club more\nabout acting and the technical\naspects of production.\nMussoc Chooses\nHolds Red Mill Auditions\nMusical Society Friday elected Bob Benson as president\nfor their 1953-54 singing season.\nA full slate of officers was*1\nelected at a Mussoc general\nmeeting, with another meeting\nto follow Friday noon In HM 1\nId approve the new constitution\nrequired by the Student Council.\nBenson will have the following members on his executive:\nBev Poison, vice-president; Sheila Madden, secretary; Havelock\nRolfe, business manager; John\nChappell, production manager;\nBetty Clarke, advertising manager; Bill Jack, Glee Club president.\nAn ambitious program of\nevents has been planned for the\nsociety this year, and auditions\nfor the annual musical production are being held today and\nFriday ih the auditorium and\nThursday in BM1.\nThis year's stage production\nwill be \"The Red Mill,\" one\nwhich has seen a success in the\npast on Broadway. Persons\nwishing lo audition are asked to\ncontact, John Chappell in Mussoc\nclubroom, auditorium, room 207.\nExpectant members of the\nGlee Club may audition in the\nsame place at thc same time.\n'Tween Classes\nContinued from page 1\nGERMAN.CLUB will hold\nfirst organizational meeting tomorrow at 12.30 in Arts 203.\neje tp op\nVARSITY OUTDOOR CLUB\nannounces a meeting each Wednesday noon in Engineering 200.\nTomorrow's meeting will discuss projected \"Long Hike\" to\nLions.\nep ^ ep ep\nHIOH SCHOOL conference\nmeeting of all those students interested tomorrow in the Double\nCommittee Room in Brock Hall.\nAll those who attended last year\nare most welcome.\n\u00C2\u00A5 \u00C2\u00A5 *\nECONOMICS SOCIETY will\nhold organizational meeting, tomorrow noon in Arts 204. First\nregular meeting will be tomorrow, 8 p.m., at 1837 Allison\nRoad. Dr. Scott will be the\nspeaker.\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nurges all those interested to attend a business meeting in HL\n16, tomorrow at 12.30. Newly\narrived oriental students are especially invited.\nCONSERVATIVE CLUB will\nhold a meeting at noon today\nin Arts 106. New members are\nwelcome.\nContinued on page 4\nODD ASSIGNMENT\nA^tV ..V..W .\n^oft cashmere-treated Lambswool...\nfull-fashioned ... hand-finished . . . shrink-proof\n. . . moth-proof. $6.95, $7.95, $8.95. Jewelled\nand others higher. At good shops everywhere.\nReporter Says Bleeders Treat You Good\nBy PAT CARNEY\nI've just parted with a pint,\nof blood. It's a rather anemic\nThere's nothing to it.\nlooking sample, but it is dedicated to save the life of\nsome victim who is no position to be fussv.\nUp until now, I've been\nkicked out of Red Cross Clinics and the Alcazar owing to\na slight discrepancy between\nmy acknowledged age and\nthat inscribed on my birth\ncertificate.\nTime has picked holes in\nthat excuse. I just turned 18,\nand a lot of Home Economics\ngirls know it. They gave me\nthe alternative of trotting into the Armouries under my\nown steam or being hauled in.\n\"There's nothing to it,\" they\nscoff. \"It only hurts those\nwho are scared.\"\nThat was the trouble. I\nwas scared. I turn pale at the\nsight of ketchup and I'm reduced to blubbering mysteries if any one Waves a hypodermic at me.\nBut I went to the Armouries.\nA nurse welcomed me with\ncooing noises of delight and\ngave me a coke. She then took\n.advantage of my effervescent spirits to prick my finger.\nAll shrinking violets please\nnote that it did not hurt. With\nthe blood from my finger she\nmade messy patterns on a\nwhite slate, looked dubiously\nat the result and \"gave, me a\nblue slip.\nI answered the questions\nrattled off by the next nurse.\nA beautiful brunette led me\nto a nice soft bed, pumped up'\nmy arm and gave me a piece\nof wood to wrestle with. Then\na blond Florence Nightingale\nswabbed off my arm, and another brunette pricked it with\nsomething and left me.\nAfter ten minutes, another\nnurse took away the blood\nbottle, and gave me a swab\nof cotton with instructions to\nhold it over the wound. I\ncontinued my nap on another\nbed. Then I was bandaged up\nand evicted from my cot.\nI finished off the party with\na coke, or coffee for those \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nwho have donated before.\nThen another nurse decorated\nme with a paper blood bottle\nand the party was over.\nThat's all there was to it.\nNo riddling you with needles,\nno faintness or other after\neffects. Just soft beds, pretty\nnurses, an odd prick or two,\ncokes and cookies.\nThe most torturous part of\nthe whole business was sweating out the no smoking time\nlimit.\nThe whole thing was a\ncheap price to pay for that\nfeeling of proud satisfaction\nI felt when lt was over.\nI think you should go over\nto the Armouries sometime\nthis week.\nAttention Students\nWe have just received a large shipment of\nultra-smart, American corduroy wind-\nbreakers and jackets.\nWe carry the largest stock of latest American-\ncollegiate-styled windbreakers and sports\ncoats in all the newest fabrics . . . corduroy,\nnylon, gabardine, etc., etc. Our prices are\npositively the lowest in Canada.\nPAY CASH AND PAY LESS\nARMY & NAVY\nDEPT. STORES\nVancouver\nNew Westminster\nSPF53\n'\"I/if ficminin' rl .Xiekel\"\na 7'J Imw bunk, lulls illii.triilril, will\nIv srnt Ini' i'/i irii-urst to itmont interested.\nThe International Nickel Company of Canada, Limited\n25 King Street West, Toronto\niMMI PAGE FOUR\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, Octotter 6,1953\nWildcats Take Birds\nIn Conference Opener\nCentral Proves To Be Tougher Than\nHomestanding Thunderbird Squad\nBy RON SArERA\nCentral Washington Wildcats rolled to an easy 32-12 win\nover UBC Thunderbirds Saturday afternoon in the Howie McPhee Stadium before a hopeful crofcd of over 3500 fans to\nbegin the 1953 Evergreen Conference season.\n43 yards while 'Cats made it^^7^71^e^~,~ and\nfour for seven and 56 yards \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 thjj defensive fl8 the\nQuick Kicks: Jack Hutchinson _\u00E2\u0080\u009E^ ntt araD at,ntinA _,_ onrf\nplayed his usual tremendous\ngame as did Stuart and Brady\nrolled off iarge ground gains and\nintercepted four UHC passes to\nnne a* did \u00C2\u00AB*\"'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\"> \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00ABJ take control of the ball and the\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Wildcats backfield started , ^^\nout as if shot from a gun ... in , *ontegt\nether games Western defeated '\nPacific Lutheran 8-7 and Whit- HUTCH SCORES TD\nworth downed Eastern 42-7. j The Birds rolled to an early\nThe visiting team proved! lead in the opening minutes as\n - i they marched from their own 36\nafter the kickoff for a nnjor\nscore.\nFour consecutive first downs\nput them on the 'Cats two-yard\nline but an offside penalty sent\nthem back to the seven. Jack\nHutchinson took a pitchout from,\nQB Gordie Flemons and scurried\naround right end for the first\nsix points.\nThe Wildcat's came right back\nhowever, going down to the\nUBC one where they were halted for three straight drives. Halfback Pierce made it on the\nfourth try through the middle\nto make it a 6-6 ball game.\nFLEMONS HURT\nAlthough no serious injuries\nwere recorded by the 'Birds,\nFlemons received slight head\ncrew, last year's runnerups, j and leg injuries in the second\nwinning their first game hand-j quarter and coach Don Coryell\nily. was forced to use him sparing-\nSoccer starts next week and jy in the final two quarters; Ro-\nentries are due rigbt now. | ger Kronquist taking over the\nThe cross country has been! signal calling duties,\nmoved up from October 22 to j Harriman made it 12-8 for\nOct. 29. Better start getting the 'Cats on a quarterback sneak\nthose lungs and legs in shape j minutes after the second half\nfellahs! | opened. The CWC squad soon\nGolf and table tennis entries made it 19-6 as Trombley went\nare also due this week, with! 48 yards over right tackle for a\nRafe Mair of Zetes and Parker TD. Harriman kicked the con-\nof P.E. getting ready to defend Vert.\ntheir respective championships.\nBetas Take Opener\nOf Men's\nIntra-Mural Y'ball\nBy STAN BECK\nMessrs Stengel and Dressen\nmanaged once again to cut down\nattendance at a meeting on campus. This time it was the elections meeting of the intramural\nmanagers. So few showed up\nthat Director Penn postponed\nthe elections until November.\nBETA'S WIN\nVolleyball got underway last\nweek with the powerful Beta\nUBC STUDENTS GOLFING\nMEET UNDERWAY TODAY\nUBC's fall match golfing tournament gets underway\ntoday at the University Golf Course and entries are invited.\nThe tournament will last one week.\nParticipants are asked to form their own groups, preferably three-somes, and must sign their names on the sheet\nin the Pro shop before teeing off. Score cards must be\nturned into the pro shop. Flights will be arranged ac-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2cording to score.\nFurther details may be obtained by phoning Al Rae,\nKe. 0867; Max Swanson, Al. 1402-L or George Barnes, Al.\n3317-L.\nFIRST DOWN for the Birds is picked up by Jolting Jack Hutchinson as Bill Kushnir\nprepares to throw a block at Wildcat player. Birds really rolled in first half but ran out of\nsteam in second to lose 33-12 in Evergreen Conference opener Saturday.\n\"Reporting\" Subject\nOf Noon Lectures\nSecond in the Ubyssey's series of lectures on newspaper\nreporting will be held in the\nstage room of Brock Hall at\nnoon Wednesday.\nAny student is welcome to attend along with Ubyssey reporters. StaKe room is on the second floor of the north end of\nthe Btock.\nFriday Noon Set For\nCheerleaders' Tryout\nCheer Leaders meeting will\nbe held on Friday at 12.30 in\nthe Women's Gymnasium. Anyone interested in becoming a\ncheerleader this year is asked to\nattend. Mo. Slutsky will be on\nhand to do the choosing. Please\nbe on time.\nArtsmen Grads\nWill Sit For Pix\nAll Arts students who are\ngraduating this year must get\ntheir grad and Totem picturei\ntaken starting Wednesday ir\n.the room across from the snack\nbar in Brock hall.\nThe pictures are already paid\nfor and it will cost you student\nnothing. The pictures must\ntaken now for the Totem. Tims\nare from 10.00 a.m. to 4.00 p.r\nAll fees are payable by this\nFriday.^ '-\nTHIS WEEK'S CARD\nTuesday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Alpha Delt 'B' vs.\nKappa 'B'; Sigma Chi vs. ABT;\nPsi U 'B' vs. Lambda Chi;\nDekes vs. Chem. Eng. 'B'; E.K's\nvs. Ex-Magee; Engineers 'B' vs.\nAnglican College.\nWednesday \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Zete vs. Meds\n'A*; Newman 'B' vs. Engineers\n'C; D.U. 'A' vs. Phi Delt 'A';\nBeta 'A' vs. ATO 'A'; Alpha\nDelta vs. Fiji 'A'; Phi K. Pi vs.\nPsi U. 'A'.\nONE MORE FOR UBC\nAs the third quarter ended\nUBC founcl themselves on the\n'Cats one after two passes, Flemons to Rayment and Rayment\nto Hudson. Hutchinson went\nover tackle to end the scoring\nfor UBC.\nHarriman and Barrett wound\nup the scoring, with both conversions kicked by Harriman.\nIn the statistics department,\nWildscats made 15 first downs\nto UBC's 14 and piled up .322\nyards to 196 in rushing. 'Birds\ncompleted three of 11 passes for\nOf course, any time is time for Coca-Cola, hut\nTONIGHT ON RADIO I ff'g\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nfi\n^TARRINe-\n<*\nVi$\nDON AMECHE!\nAND QUEST STAR\npresented for your enjoyment\nby\nCOCA-COLA\nLTD.\nEvery\nWEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY\nTUNE IN 7:45 P.M.\nCJOR\nCckr>\" is ,i rpqir.lcred lia.lr mark EF-l-R Coca-Cola-Ltd.\nNew Westminster Fraser Valley Branch Office\nZeller Bldg., 604 Columbia St., New Westminster\nFred B. G'froerer, Branch Manager\nVancouver Interior B.C. Yukon Branch Office\nStock Exchange Bldg., 475 Howe St.\nH. C. Webber, C.L.U., Branch Manager\nVancouver Branch Office, 402 W. Pender St.\nEric V. Chown, LL.B., C.L.U., Branch Manager\nVictoria Branch Office, 201 Scollard Bldg.' Robt. M. Moore, C.L.U., Branch Manager\nFOR YOUR CONVENIENCE\nYou will find branches of The Canadian Bank of Commerce\nin Vancouver at\n10th and Sasamat\nUniversity Boulevard and Western Parkway\nin Victoria at\n2241 Oak Bay Ave.\n1022 Government St.\nWhatever the size of your account, you will receive a cordial\nwelcome.\nThe Canadian Bank of Commerce\nIfelwesmengtf\n?.\nsaves\n0. &\nNO TIRESOME WINDING \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJust pin curl as uiual and cipply\nBobbi. No wrona way waves\noi wront)-place cutis. No new\nciumiy curloi's to fiddle with I\n/\n5f/\n^..\nNO NtUTRAllZEtJ \u00E2\u0080\u0094 J.^tiinin\n*-Mi Cl.mil wulm 'I.*) ininwfe.\natfc uppLinst lotion. No foai\nol Im, , dinky emit bom loll\nNO mETTING \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Just bruih\npin Mil', wlitin city. Bobbi pi'r-\nInam.nfs vour most Hcttteunu,\nhoi. il/lf -it.!,, itylas. Wclvttt\noil ol one tlmo I\n(W\nPIN CURL PERMANENT\nSets. Styles. Waves\u00E2\u0080\u0094ALL AT ONE TIME!\nSo fust, so familiar a method that giving\nyourself a Hobbi takes just a few minutes\nmore than putting your pin curls up at\nnight -yet your hair is fwrMitiient/y waved\nin the style you want for weeks and\nweeks! Hohbi gives you a >oft, casual,\ncarefree curl that sclsat alingertip'stouch.\nSo cusy you do it\nyourself\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNO HELP\nNEEDEDI"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1953_10_06"@en . "10.14288/1.0124984"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of British Columbia"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .