The Crawl, which showcases all sorts of interdisciplinary works from pottery to mixed-media, took place last weekend (Nov. 12-14) and will take place this weekend too.
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The first panel of day two focused on how society can adapt to climate change.
McIvor advises readers to “be open to setting aside and questioning some of [their] assumed knowledge about the law” before engaging with this book.
“Our primary goal,” Mayank Gupta, UBC Design League’s marketing rep, explained, “is to get students to feel more comfortable by hosting design competitions and creating new opportunities.”
On a rainy Friday night, I caught an enactment of Spinning You Home, performed at the small but cozy Jericho Arts Centre.
Petite Maman accomplishes more in seventy two minutes than most movies do in two hours.
Kimmortal’s intimate, genre-blending music is a celebration of their identity.
The Ubyssey spoke to students on campus about which songs suited their autumnal commute to class; some students mentioned why they feel connected to these songs and how music is related to cherished memories.
Cumberbatch tucks away his usual eccentric intellectual persona underneath Phil’s deliberate veneer of menace and roughness.
“Anyone doing shrooms this summer?” Lorica chided with a pre-pandemic crowd at Yuk Yuk’s Comedy Club in Vancouver.
Like many millennials, Julie has little certainty about what she wants out of her life in the unknowable decades that remain ahead of her.
“We want you to be part of the interaction and feel like you’re socializing instead of making it a passive experience,” said Saeed.
If there’s one thing I love more than poetry, it’s challenging definitions of what the heteronormative, neurotypical and ableist world defines as “love.”
Located in the city that is known for never playing itself, UBC’s Vancouver campus has been disguised as everything from Nazi Germany to a high school to even multiple different science fiction universes.
“[Sankofa] means ‘Come out boldly to be who you are, come out boldly to be your person. Don't be afraid of what people will think about you…’ You can’t take away your ancestors,” said Salami.