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Pea Man, a person wearing a black shirt and bright green ski mask, stands in the middle of a crowd while holding up a bag of frozen peas.

Stay at UBC long enough and you start to recognize the little things that make autumn what it is on campus: fragrant petals in the rose garden; the oak trees’ edges turning yellow on the malls; the guy in the green ski-mask vomiting, moaning, absolutely housing two-and-a-half kilograms of frozen peas outside the Nest.

Two teenage girls in yellow camp t-shirts, crouched on the ground and holding flashlights.

As a wide-reaching and accessible platform for emerging theatre artists, Fringe is a great opportunity to get a taste for up-and-coming faces and works in the theatre world, so try to catch a show or two!

A blonde gymnast in a blue leotard stands on tiptoe with a large gold hoop in her hands.

By 2022, I had been a rhythmic gymnast for 15 years. I had competed for 12, of which 7 were at the national level. I was recovering from several injuries that I was pretending weren’t career-ending. I was losing love for the sport. Then Nikolova showed up and reminded me what rhythmic gymnastics could be.

The rusty motorcycle took a sharp swerve, slightly tossing my damp backpack. Sitting in the backseat under the poncho flap extending from my father’s back, I tried to guess our location through the thick curtain of monsoon rain.

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