Kip the Coyote wasn’t just another furry friend on UBC campus — from sunbathing on the lawns of Place Vanier to chasing squirrels down Main Mall, Kip has touched the hearts of UBC students for years.
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The Vancouver Outsider Arts Festival (VOAF) is returning for its 8th year, running from October 11–13 at the Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Centre.
ANOHNI joined Naomi Klein on stage on October 4 in a conversation co-hosted by the UBC Centre for Climate Justice and the Chan Centre to explore her work in a time of global ecological crisis.
Okay, so I’m super drunk, right? And I’m walking down Main Mall at like 2 a.m.
This past weekend, UBC Opera performed a run of Gilbert and Sullivan’s 1878 comedy H.M.S Pinafore, directed by UBC Opera Ensemble founder Nancy Hermiston and conducted by Leslie Dala.
Whether you want to catch a few bands at the Biltmore or chill to some classical music at the Chan Centre, there’s something for everyone, all for under $15.
As fun as it is to party the night away, you have to take precautions to keep yourself safe — and for Queer women and Trans people, the Warehouse (or Eastside Studios) was a refuge.
I’ll be the first to say that growing old is a privilege — and an environmental liability. It’s a dark thought that I usually mull over under blankets and between bedroom walls. That was, until I caught UBC alumna Ann Marie Fleming’s sci-fi drama Can I Get a Witness? at this year's Vancouver International Film Festival.
A Way to Be Happy is a composite work of new and old writing (three of the eight stories in the book have been previously published), but this mix of new and old leads one to question whether they share anything more in common than an author.
It’s a sunny day at Great Dane. Beams of light peek through the buildings that shade the patio, creating sunny patches where students gather, laptops out and coffees in hand.
As a social justice student, I’ve had to engage with many works exploring the idea of “home.”
At Carousel Theatre for Young People’s drag camp, participants are asked to step into someone else’s shoes for the day — and in letting go of their worries and pretending to be someone else, they often find themselves emerging with more confidence.
Three years ago, xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) and UBC’s Chan Centre worked in collaboration to host the first ʔəm̓i ce:p xʷiwəl (Come Toward the Fire), a free-entry festival celebrating the resilience and talent of North America/Turtle Island’s Indigenous peoples.
In this year's Vancouver Fringe Festival, Camp Goneaway follows two pre-teen campers during their last summer at their beloved camp before it shuts down due to the area becoming too polluted.
Keeping up with all the changes that come with being a teenager is hard enough. But it’s also a period where we start to realize things about ourselves that we’ll deal with our entire life.