A writer and director realize their play isn't going as planned. But as they try to save the show, the lines between real life and theatre start to blur as the characters cross boundaries and are forced to decide how much they’re willing to sacrifice for excellence.
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You saw the signs in first year. Plain white paper, large, bolded Arial, taped up in improbable places.
Senate met last night to talk about an open letter concerning academic freedom, the strategic plan refresh and pass several motions.
Communist ideologies are gaining momentum on Canadian university campuses — what does that shift look like at UBC?
Candidates running to represent the Vancouver Quadra in the upcoming federal election met last Friday in the Michael Kingsmill Forum to debate their stances on housing affordability, the Canadian healthcare system and the future role of federal public service.
Musqueam executive and First Nations advocate Wade Grant is running for the Liberal party in the Vancouver-Quadra with housing, climate change and mental health support as top priorities.
Vancouver Park Board Commissioner and intellectual property lawyer Tom Digby is running for the Green Party of Canada in the upcoming federal election.
Ken Charko is running to represent Vancouver Quadra as a Member of Parliament with the Conservative Party of Canada.
John Ede is running as the People’s Party of Canada (PPC) candidate for Vancouver Quadra on a platform wanting re-examine policies around climate, immigration and protecting free speech.
Alim Fakirani is running as the New Democratic Party (NDP) candidate for Vancouver Quadra on a platform centring affordability, a sustainable economy and climate policies.
An open letter, signed by over 220 professors from across Canada — as well as the United States, Europe and Australia — is opposing proposed changes to UBC’s draft academic freedom policy, which is on the agenda for the upcoming April 16 Vancouver Senate meeting.
Climate action isn’t as politically popular as it used to be — but it doesn’t have to be that way. Climate activists have shaped our perceptions before with movements like Fridays for Future, and they can do it again, argues External Politics Columnist Maya Tommasi.
The Ubyssey is hiring a second news editor for a term ending April 2026.
After the COVID-19 pandemic, the UBC alum found herself working in the arena and eventually behind the driver's seat of a Zamboni.
Select UBC graduate programs are re-opening their applications from April 14–18, which are aimed at recruiting students from the United States.