This year, football finished their season with a 6-2 record and upset last years Hardy Cup winners, the Manitoba Bisons, 52-10. This year, SportsNet is writing about the team's quarterback. This year, homecoming saw almost 7,000 fans attend and have an average of attendance of 3,034.
You know that giant hanging whale skeleton on Main Mall in the Beaty Biodiversity Museum? This week, it got some much needed TLC and cleaning.
But there are two games everyone should go to. Soccer on Friday and football on Saturday. They are the most exciting and important games of the weekend should have the best fan atmosphere.
You’re a university student, you love free stuff. So why haven’t you gotten your free flu shot already?
The team and the student population, proved that UBC football can draw a crowd. Win or lose, the ‘Birds proved UBC can care about sports.
UBC rugby hooker, Sauder student, Thunderbird Athletic Council (TAC) president, Red Bull student brand manager. Meet Alex Mascott. The Vancouver-native is entering his fifth year at UBC but he’s definitely not done leaving his mark.
Chemotherapy is the current drug of choice to treat cancer. It kills cancer cells, while trying to do as little damage as possible to healthy cells. Now there might be a better way to fight cancer.
Last Friday, the UBC swim team hosted their annual Alumni meet. Former Thunderbird swimmer convene on the aquatic centre to show the current team what they are (still) made of.
While you’ve been busy procrastinating midterms with Netflix, tubs of ice cream and Oreos, the UBC Thunderbird varsity athletes have been busy training, competing and winning — mostly.
The ‘Birds have everything it takes to win this game, the bigger question is whether UBC is ready to watch them win.
Thunderbirds women’s soccer tied the University of Victoria Vikes, 2-2, in a tight, high-intensity match.
Ubyssey Science is here to share stories with everyone at UBC from science majors to the inner nerd every art student has.
The researchers then took poop from three-month olds, who they knew developed asthma, and transferred it into mice. Mice with the transferred kid poop went on to develop high levels of asthma, mice with poop spiked with FLVR did not develop asthma.
This year, UBC’s iGEM team worked on creating a genetically modified Gilliamella apicola (a type of bacteria that lives in bees' intestines) that can help bees combat colony collapse disorder.
Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre just got a massive facelift. In preparation for the 2016 CIS Men’s Basketball Final 8, the centre, which usually houses the ice hockey rink, has a new, hardwood basketball court.