I only get vulnerable halfway through the night
At night, stripped of everything but its salty residue in the air, the sea looks different.
We drove straight into the storm. Rain pelted against our windshield, the classic rock playing from the car’s speakers fighting to be heard over the sound of the wind outside.
The day doesn’t feel like it’s really started. My alarm flashes 08:00, but there’s no light leaking through the slats of the blinds.
The UBC boundary with Marine Drive is a popular route for pedestrians, cyclists and drivers, many of whom are members of the university community — but are its recent safety improvements enough to make the stretch significantly safer and address community concerns?
Whether they have taken it or not, most UBC students have likely heard about the difficulty of MATH 100: Differential Calculus with Applications.
David Eby and the NDP should learn from past premiers and focus on governing for the long-term, writes Corwin Davidson.
Nine lanes of canoes with fifteen paddlers each makes up the Canadian sport of C15, more commonly called war canoe. But where did that name come from — and how is it linked to Canada’s colonial history?
On October 30, AMS Council met to discuss a recommendation from the Executive Performance and Accountability (EPA) Committee and hear a presentation on AMS bursaries.
What do we need to consider about our food, beyond our own nutrition? Who and what is being impacted by the food on our plate? The framework for understanding the environmental, social and nutritional impacts of food is called food literacy.
For the month of October, we asked five student athletes five quick questions ranging from turkey dinner to scary movies.
“The Student Demographic Survey has so much potential, as long as we can unlock it. This idea has so much promise, so long as we can release the data for the entire community to benefit from,” writes Sarina Virani.
The AMS held its Annual General Meeting (AGM) over Zoom on Tuesday at 9 a.m.
For the fifth time, The Ubyssey broke down the budgets of the largest student societies at UBC.
Learning a bit of a new language out of interest should certainly be encouraged, yet this may not provide the skills that the Faculty of Arts aims to teach, writes Marie Erikson.