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STOP CODDLING CARTER Coyotes aren’t pets; for his own sake, don’t let him get too used to people. P7 ESCAPE FROM SUNSET ISLAND New board game created by UBC alumni makes both zombies and your friends a challenge. P5 MILLIONS IN MEDICAL FUNDING Three UBC professors to further Alzheimer’s research with a grant for over $1 million each. P4 SWIMMING DOMINANCE Men’s and women’s teams take home Canada West championship. P9 CANADA’S SMARTEST PERSON Braden Lauer outperformed other finalists in order to win the CBC television series NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | VOLUME XCVI | ISSUE XXVI READING UPSIDE DOWN SINCE 1918

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Page 1: Nov 27, 2014

STOP CODDLING CARTER

Coyotes aren’t pets; for his own sake, don’t let him get too used

to people.

P7

ESCAPE FROM SUNSET ISLAND

New board game created by UBC alumni makes both zombies and

your friends a challenge.

P5

MILLIONS IN MEDICAL FUNDING

Three UBC professors to further Alzheimer’s research with a

grant for over $1 million each.

P4

SWIMMING DOMINANCE Men’s and women’s teams take home Canada West championship. P9

CANADA’SSMARTESTPERSONBraden Lauer outperformed other finalists

in order to win the CBC television series

NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | VOLUME XCVI | ISSUE XXVIREADING UPSIDE DOWN SINCE 1918

Page 2: Nov 27, 2014

STAFF

Natalie Scadden, CJ Pentland, Kosta Prodanovic, Dave Nixon, Soren Elsay, Olamide Olaniyan, Lawrence Neal Garcia, Tariq Vira, Kelley Lin, Jenny Tang, Leo Soh, Mateo Ospina, Lu Zhang, Brock Newman, Koby Michaels, Jasmine Cheng, Miguel Santa Maria, Natalie Morris

NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | VOLUME XCVI | ISSUE XXVIUTHE UBYSSEY

The Ubyssey is the official student newspaper of the Univer-sity of British Columbia. It is pub-lished every Monday and Thurs-day by The Ubyssey Publications Society. We are an autonomous, democratically run student orga-nization, and all students are en-couraged to participate.

Editorials are chosen and written by the Ubyssey staff. They are the expressed opinion of the staff, and do not necessarily re-flect the views of The Ubyssey Publications Society or the Uni-versity of British Columbia. All editorial content appearing in The Ubyssey is the property of The Ubyssey Publications Society. Stories, opinions, photographs and artwork contained herein

cannot be reproduced without the expressed, written permis-sion of The Ubyssey Publica-tions Society.

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and clarity. All letters must be received by 12 noon the day be-fore intended publication. Let-ters received after this point will be published in the follow-ing issue unless there is an ur-gent time restriction or other matter deemed relevant by the Ubyssey staff.

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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | 2YOUR GUIDE TO UBC EVENTS, PEOPLE + CAMPUS

Prof Bob Kull is a naturalist, activist and nonconformistAusten ErhardtOpinions & Blog Editor

Bob Kull is a UBC professor of interdisciplinary studies who flunked out of Berkeley, lived in complete solitude on a Chilean is-land for a year, and, as of Saturday, has an arrest record.

Kull grew up in California, in an academically minded family. After taking a year off to hitchhike around the USA following high school, Kull enrolled in University of California - Berkeley — and found himself completely ill at ease with the atmosphere.

“The only two courses I passed were fencing and modern dance,” Kull said.

After dropping out, Kull moved to Canada to avoid conscription in the Vietnam War. He studied photography in Edmonton, for a time, and eventually ended up in B.C., where he worked as a main-tenance worker, logger, tree planter and firefighter.

When he was 28, Kull lived in isolation in Tweedsmuir Park for three months. After he returned, he signed up to volunteer in the Dominican Republic, teaching organic vegetable gardening.

“In having avoided the draft, I felt as if I’d avoided a really import-ant social obligation. Not to go kill people, but to participate in our common world — and not just for my own life.”

He spent nine years in the Do-minican Republic, teaching vege-table gardening and conducting first aid after a hurricane hit the area. He then became involved with water sports, and taught diving for a time on the coast, until a serious motorcycle accident led to him being hospitalized in Montreal for nearly a year. After his release from the hospital and the loss of both his leg and his livelihood, Kull began his studies at McGill.

Kull graduated with a dual degree in psychology and biology,

with a minor in environmental science and won an NSERC fellow-ship to go on in biology.

“By this time I had really shifted the way I was looking at the world. It started with my first long retreat into solitude when I was in my late 20s. The world wasn’t just a collec-tion of separate things and times — it was really a transformation of consciousness. There’s this under-lying unity of which all organisms are a manifestation.”

Kull put his studies on hold and travelled to South America, even-tually deciding to study interdisci-plinary studies at UBC.

Though he started his research by studying organisms in the conventional way, Kull eventually came to the realization that he wanted to bring himself into the research he was conducting.

“My whole focus shifted — the animal whose behaviour I’m really interested in studying is myself. What are the effects of long wilderness solitude on a human being?”

Kull had passed by the isolated coast of Chile on a ferry during his travels and was struck by its natural beauty. Once he had determined that he would go into the wilderness, he thought back to Chile, and decided to spend a year on the island there — 100 miles from other people.

“Whether you’re there a month or a year, you have to deal with what comes up day by day. There was a lot of physical pain — I hurt myself badly, several times … had to pull a tooth. A lot of spiritual and emotional challenges,” Kull said.

When he returned to Vancouver with 900 pages of notes, Kull found himself at a standstill in his thesis, for a time.

“I was resisting what is so often counselled: ‘it’s just a dissertation,’ or ‘it’s just a master’s thesis’ — just write it and get on with your life … then you’ll do your real work!’ And

I said, ‘no — this is my real work … this is my life.’”

Eventually, the media caught wind of his experiences and Kull’s generally solitary life became inun-dated with newspaper interviews and TV and radio appearances.

After receiving his PhD, he started teaching systems thinking at Royal Roads University and, four years ago, UBC invited him to teach a course in interdisciplinary studies. Kull has always worked part time, and currently lives in a 250 square foot Kitsilano basement suite.

“My time is more valuable to me than money.… Nice things just don’t matter to me. If you ask the question, ‘how much do you need?’ The answer seems to be ... ‘we need more.’”

Over the past few weeks, Kull has been a frequent visitor of Bur-naby Mountain, protesting Kinder Morgan’s proposed pipeline ex-pansion. On Nov. 22, Kull crossed into the injunction zone and was arrested by the RCMP.

“I’ve felt for a considerable length of time now, that given what I know … about climate change, I don’t live and I don’t see very many people living as if it were real. We just keep doing what we’re doing,” Kull said. “When the police did show up [on the mountain], there was a sense that this was just not right, and that I needed to stand up somehow.”

Kull was released from jail the same day as his arrest — his court date set for January — and has already resumed protesting. He wrote a letter to the Vancouver Observer detailing the courteous behaviour of the RCMP during his arrest and the generally cordial re-lationship that he and many other protesters have had with the police on Burnaby Mountain.

“My sense is that, finally, there are no angels or demons. We’re all embedded in a really dysfunction-al system. A system that allows Kinder Morgan to exist,” Kull said. “The way the system is set up, we all need petroleum to survive. It’s not that ‘these guys are good and these guys are bad’. It’s that we all need to wake up … and make long-term, fundamental changes in our relationship with the environ-ment and with ourselves. That’s the fundamental reason I go up to the mountain: the sense of the long process of standing up for my own vision of waking up. Maybe I’m right, maybe I’m wrong — it’s just what I feel called to do.” U

EVENTS THIS WEEK, CHECK OUT ... OUR CAMPUS ONE ON ONE WITH THE PEOPLE AND BUILDINGS THAT MAKE UBC

ON THE

COVER

FRIDAY 28

Kull has lived alone in the wilderness and was recently arrested for protesting the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion.PHOTO CHERIHAN HASSUN / THE UBYSSEY

Want to see your events listed here? Email your events listings to [email protected].

THE CALENDER’S ANNUAL CHRISTMAS PARTY9:00 P.M. @ MANCHESTER PUBLIC EATERY

The Calendar is hosting its annual Christmas party at the Manchester this Fri-day. Dress up, bring your friends and celebrate the beginning of the holiday

season and with a live band and a DJ. $5 Early Bird, $10~$15

FRIDAY 28

BE THE CHANGE 4:30 - 6:00 P.M. @ LARGE ASSEMBLY HALL, HILLEL HOUSE

Join UBC president Arvind Gupta and chair of the non-profit organization VIDYA in a discussion of the empowerment of women and youth in India

through mentorship with UBC students. Free

THURSDAY 27

POLAR BEAR SWIM3:00 P.M. @ WRECK BEACHTake part in UBC’s (unofficial) annual polar bear swim. It’s a great and chilly way to celebrate the last day of classes and (hopefully) a short respite before exams. Free

I felt my IQ was either getting higher or lower. I’m not sure which. Photo -Cherihan Hassun

My whole focus shifted — the animal whose behaviour I’m really

interested in studying is myself. What are

the effects of long wilderness solitude on

a human being?” Bob Kull

UBC interdisciplinary studies prof and pipeline protester

I was resisting what is so often counselled:

‘It’s just a dissertation’ ... just write it and get

on with your life … then you’ll do your real work!’ And I said, ‘no —

this is my real work… this is my life.’”

Bob Kull

Page 3: Nov 27, 2014

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | 3EDITORS JOVANA VRANIC + VERONIKA BONDARENKO

Fire alarms force students to evacuate

Two fire alarms went off this week, causing evacuations of two major UBC spaces.

At 11 a.m. on November 24, the SUB was evacuated after a fire alarm went off due to a minor accident in the construction area in the building’s basement.

Two days later, on November 26, another alarm went off around 10:30 a.m. in the Henry Angus building, causing hundreds of students and staff to evacuate.

The fire department was not available to comment by press time.

UNA community centre robbed

The University Neighbourhoods Association’s (UNA) Old Barn Community Centre on Thunder-bird Blvd. was broken into on the night of Sunday, Nov. 23.

According to a media release, some $20,000 worth of equipment was stolen from the centre.

The UNA is asking the public to send in any tips they have that may help determine the suspect of the break-in.

UBC searches for new VP Finance

A broadcast email was sent out on November 26 informing university students and staff of UBC’s search for a VP Finance candidate.

Former VP Finance Pierre Ouillet left UBC in September. Since then, administration has been planning to reform the position to separate it from the Resources and Operations sector “to ensure that the next VP Finance focuses fully on the finan-cial affairs [of UBC],” according to the broadcast message.

A committee has been put together to sift through nomina-tions, which may be submitted by anyone around the world. U

NEWS BRIEFS

Lyra FokContributor

On the night of Sunday, Nov. 23, golden sparks showered upon UBC Law student Braden Lauer to mark his victory in the season finale of CBC television series Canada’s Smartest Person.

Lauer outperformed other finalists including a fighter pilot, home-schooled orthopedic surgery resident and a spoken word poet.

Currently in his second year at UBC Law, Lauer applied to be a contestant on the show on a whim, following a bad final exam in Constitutional Law, he said.

After being selected as one of the top 32 contestants, he joined the program production in To-ronto over the summer and kept quiet about the results until the final broadcast.

According to Lauer, he thought being on television would be easy, but he turned out to be wrong.

“It was much more stressful [than school and work]. The host would say the same things four times in a roll so they could take the same shot from different an-gles, and you had to answer all the questions four times,” he said.

It was a strange “stop and start feeling,” having to repeat himself in front of the cameras, Lauer said; especially in contrast to the

one-take challenges that were also shot as part of the show.

The series, which aims to re-define what it means to be smart, pits contestants against each other in a series of games to test six types of intelligence: musical, physical, social, logical, visual and linguistic. This categoriz-ation of intelligence is based

on the Multiple Intelligences Theory of Harvard University professor Howard Gardner.

This set of unconventional cri-teria led to contestants improvis-ing songs using randomly shown lyrics, advocating for cities to become Canada’s new capital and stacking cups into towers. In the finale, Lauer raced past

his fellow contestant, Johnny McRae, a Vancouver spoken word poet, in a giant gauntlet before claiming the title.

Lauer said his experience with the show was an exciting and positive one. He expressed appreciation for how the compe-tition was able to showcase the diversity of people’s intelligence.

“You can apply yourself in different ways, not just in logical means,” he said.

He was also impressed by the diversity of the contestants.

“It’s something CBC sometimes maybe struggle to do, but they really found 32 people across Can-ada from different walks of life ... and brought them together,” said Lauer. “It’s kinda cool showcase for anyone who watched to see what’s out there in Canada, how many special people we have and how proud we can be of having these people in the country.”

Off-screen, getting to know the contestants and the produ-cers was another perk of the show for Lauer, who said he is doing his best to stay in touch with many of the contestants and production crew.

Since Sunday’s season finale, Lauer has been busy looking at feedback from the show’s audi-ence, which he claims has been 80 to 90 per cent positive so far.

“I’m excited about the whole show,” he said. “I hope it sticks around. I would totally love to watch it again.”

Lauer is now back at school, studying for finals just like any other UBC student, only now, he has the title of “Canada’s smartest person” to serve as motivation. U

Braden Lauer was the very first winner of the CBC’s new television series, Canada’s Smartest Person.PHOTO CHERIHAN HASSUN/THE UBYSSEY

STUDENTS >>

Canada’s smartest person is a UBC Law studentDespite tough competition Braden Lauer won the first season of CBC’s new game show

Veronika BondarenkoNews Editor

UBC recently held an awards ceremony to honour achievements of seven influential alumni and community members.

Alumni UBC, which brings together UBC graduates and the university, organized its an-nual alumni UBC Achievement Awards ceremony on November 17. This year’s recipients included doctors, social justice advocates and computer programmers.

Karolin König, alumni rela-tions coordinator at alumni UBC, said that the awards are a way to celebrate and recognize some of the most interesting and inspir-ing people at UBC.

“We honour seven members of the UBC community who have done extraordinary things through different activities and have connected to the university, as well as tying up to the larger local, global and international community to create positive change and affect people in in-spiring ways,” said König.

This year, the UBC alumni who were recognized at the ceremony included Leona Sparrow, the Director of Treaty, Lands and Re-sources for the Musqueam Indian Band, and John Demco, the creator of the original .CA domain name.

The award winners are select-ed from public nominations to categories for alumni as well as current students and faculty. Once nominations close in Janu-ary, an awards selection commit-tee chooses the winner for each of the seven categories.

“[The awards are] honouring people who are connected to the UBC community in a meaningful way, really honouring not only their commitment to the UBC community but also celebrating the positive change that they have made in the world,” said König.

Alumnus Videsh Kapoor and current Faculty of Surgery Clinical Instructor Kimit Rai both received awards for establishing health or-ganizations that aim to bring medic-al aid to remote and poverty-strick-en areas in developing countries.

Recent UBC Law graduate Emi-ly McKinnon received the Young Alumnus Award for her research and volunteer work with people who are living with HIV/AIDS.

The remaining two awards went out to Randall Findlay,

the co-founder of the Provident Energy Trust, and Matt Husain, a current PhD student who has spent six years working at the World Bank Group and started up numerous humanitarian and poverty-reduciton initiatives. U

Alumni UBC holds an awards ceremony each year to honour its most notable alumni.PHOTO WILL MCDONALD/THE UBYSSEY

ALUMNI >>

Businesspeople, humanitarians and leaders honoured with alumni awards

Page 4: Nov 27, 2014

4 | NEWS | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014

Jovana Vranic & Veronika BondarenkoNews Editors

On Tuesday, Nov. 25, UBC’s Board of Governors met for their last standing committee meeting of 2014. The majority of the meeting was held in camera.

Here is a summary of the three motions that were passed during the brief open session.

ADVANCED MATERIALS & PROCESS ENGINEERING LABORATORY

The Quantum Matter Institute (QMI) is expanding to open a new, state-of-the-art, research lab.

The project will be contrib-uting to the university’s goals to strengthen and expand research opportunities, and, as the Board documents state, “make UBC one of — if not the — world leaders in quantum materials research.”

AMPEL has a final budget of $27.2 million, with construction costs coming in $2 million above the previous proposal presented to the Board.

It is being developed in part-nership with the Max Planck Society and the Canada Excel-lence Research Chair (CERC) in Quantum Materials and Devices, held by Harvard materials scien-tist Jenny Hoffman.

Designs and tender documents have recently been completed, and the majority of the pro-ject is ready to head into the construction phase.

The site of the addition will stretch the Brimacombe building to the end of the Engineering Lane block, to East Mall.

UBC is planning to have con-struction of AMPEL completed by July 2016.

LIFE SCIENCES TEACHING LABS RENEWAL

UBC will be spending $80 mil-lion on renewing and expanding the Biological Sciences complex to open new, better equipped teaching labs to replace the ones in the BioSciences centre, North wing, Wesbrook and D.H. Copp buildings. It will also address seismic risk associated with the three buildings.

At the November meeting, the Board approved a funding release

of $5.5 million to finish up design drawings and tender documents, after which final plans for con-struction will be brought to the standing committee.

The provincial government has pledged $21.25 million toward the project through the Ministry of Advanced Education.

The remainder of funding is slated to come out of UBC’s Cen-tral Operating Budget and Trek Endowment Fund.

As part of the project, the Gen-eral Services and Administraion (GSAB) building is also going to be demolished to provide a site for further development in the Wesbrook Mall area.

The GSAB and Copp sites will serve to generate development revenue by shifting two uni-versity housing projects from Wesbrook Place to the academic lands of centre campus. The new buildings in place of GSAB and Copp are expected to take the form of mixed use complexes.

These developments will pro-vide revenue for the endowment funds and the Trek spending account, which will, in turn, fund the teaching labs loan.

CHAN GUNN SPORTS MEDICINE PAVILION

The Board also approved the in-itial plans for a new Sports Medi-cine Centre, to be located between the Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre and Robert F. Os-borne Centre, by the Thunderbird fields.

The new centre will replace the current building, which is scheduled to be torn down in June 2015 to make room for the centre that will become a joint training facility between UBC and the Vancouver Whitecaps.

The new space will house offices, research labs and clinical facilities for sports injuries.

The Board also approved an initial funding release of $500,000 in order to hire a consultant who will begin working on the initial designs for the building.

Thanks to a $5 million naming donation, the centre is proposed to be named the ‘Chan Gunn Pavillion,’ after the president of the Institute for the Study and Treatment of Pain and member of the Order of Canada. U

NEED TO TALK?

SOLUTION FOCUSED COUNSELLING FOR STUDENTS & STAFF

604.873.1280counsellingatvanwest.com

Dr. Elizabeth Demeter

BOARD OF GOVERNORS >>

BoG briefs: sports medicine, life sciences and quantum matter

Veronika BondarenkoNews Editor

Degeneration of the brain is about to become the focus of much more research.

Three UBC professors will receive more than $4 million in grant funding to continue their study of Alzheimer’s disease.

The grant has been made with the aim of supporting research on Alzheimer’s disease, a form of

dementia that affects over 70,000 people in B.C.

Organizations that have con-tributed include Brain Canada, the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research, Genome B.C. and The Pacific Alzheimer Research Foundation.

B.C. Health Minister Terry Lake said that this research will be an im-portant step in researching and pos-sibly developing an eventual cure.

“Government is commit-ted to supporting those living with dementia and recognizes the importance of research and working collaboratively in finding a cure,” Lake said in a news release.

James Johnson, an associate professor in the department of cellular and psychological sci-ences, will receive $1.05 million in funding to study the ways that insulin production affects Alz-heimer’s patients.

Christian Naus, also a profes-sor in the department of cellular and psychological sciences, will receive $1.5 million to develop drugs that can help preserve neurons that are responsible for brain degeneration.

Neurology professor Neil Cashman will also receive $1.5 million to develop better diag-nostic and treatment options for Alzheimer’s patients.

Along with two more Alz-heimer’s researchers from SFU, these professors will use the money from the grant to help the medical community develop a bet-ter understanding of Alzheimer’s.

Alzheimer’s advocate Jim Mann said the research that will be generated by these professor is expected to make a lasting dif-ference in the lives of people who are affected by the disease.

“These research projects are key to advancing therapies and diagnostic tools for people with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia,” said Mann. “Investment into research is critical to our struggle and offers us greater hope than before.” U

Vicki ChowContributor

Access & Diversity’s Really? cam-paign hopes to encourage students to speak up about the discrimination that they see in their everyday lives.

The campaign is devoted to promoting respect for UBC’s diverse community by teach-ing individuals to respond to discrimination that they witness instead of walking away.

CJ Rowe, diversity advis-or-women for UBC Access & Diversity, said that program had its beginnings in January 2011 when

guest speaker Jackson Katz gave a talk on how people can begin to break the cycle of silence when it comes to violence against women.

According to Rowe, the campaign started with the idea that small and seemingly benign behaviours such as sexist jokes can all contribute to a culture of violence and discrimination.

“The idea of the campaign was sparked by those issues but expanded to incorporate all types of diversity, including race and sexual orientation, and the dis-crimination that goes along with

being a member of any of these groups,” said Rowe.

The campaign is meant to encourage students to be active by-standers who speak up when they encounter situations when people make discriminatory comments. On a larger scale, the campaign hopes to open up conversation on how discrimination against someone’s race, gender, sexual orientation or ethnicity can be perpetuated in small ways.

“We’ve all witnessed related toxic behaviours both on and off campus, but it’s hard for people to respond to them because they don’t think they know how or they’re afraid of the possible repercussions,” said Rowe.

The campaign’s primary focus involves holding interactive work-shops where participants learn how to speak up in a safe and effective way when they encounter these types of situations.

“Participants will learn what they, as bystanders, can do when they witness these types of scenar-ios and the skills required to inter-vene with them,” said Rowe.

Rowe also said that the name of the campaign was meant to reflect a phrase that could be used to call out a problematic comment or behaviour.

“Since the program emphasizes questioning negative behaviours, we wanted our name to reflect that,” said Rowe. “’Really?’ in itself can be used as a phrase to help bystanders point out prejudi-cial situations,” said Rowe.

Access & Diversity also recruits student leaders who lead and organize these types of workshops throughout the year and, in doing so, teach their peers how to speak up against instan-ces of prejudice and inequality in everyday situations. U

Over $4 million in funding was awarded to UBC professors for Alzheimer’s research.

The Really? campaign aims to teach students how to be active bystanders.

FILE PHOTO JOSH CURRAN/THE UBYSSEY

PHOTO VERONIQUE DEBORD-LAZARO/FLICKR

MEDICINE >>

DIVERSITY >>

Erasing Alzheimer’s with millions in munitions

Really? campaign hopes to encourage students to speak up against discrimination

UWant to write for news?

COME BY THE UBYSSEY OFFICE SUB 24, FOLLOW THE SIGNS

Page 5: Nov 27, 2014

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | 5EDITOR JENICA MONTGOMERY

Gabriel GermaixSenior Staff Writer

It is a common trait of revered novels for the characters to feel real and alive to the reader. However UBC alumnus Michael Hethering-ton’s thriller Hooked — released in October — fails to achieve this key literary device.

Adrian, an accomplished outdoorsy vancouverite, meets sim-ilarly outdoorsy Mandy when the young woman rescues him as he is entangled in a fish line whose hook lodged itself under his skin. From

there evolves a passionless romance that spans over a handful of days where the not-so-happy couple hikes, sails and swims almost with-out talking to each other. All the while he is followed and threatened by Mandy’s ex and two mysterious oarsmen in a rowboat, Adrian’s future is cloudy at best.

Hetherington fails to make his characters endearing to readers, they lack redeeming features to compensate for their flaws, and the reader is left unsympathetic to their cause.

Adrian is too little developed for the reader to bond and start taking an interest in his endeav-ours. Hetherington himself found no connection between his own personality and any of his char-acters.

“No, I do not [feel close to the characters], I made them up,” said Hetherington. Adrian’s overall personality seems to lack coher-ence, missing something that we can relate to in order to turn him from a product of words into a product of flesh.

Hooked appears to leave aside the potential interest that character development could arouse in the reader, and instead trades it for action scenes that follow each other at a reasonable pace. The book throws its main characters into realistic scenes of tension while they are still sketches, not taking advantage of the pressure exerted on a reader who fears something bad will happen to their favourite hero.

Hetherington created the back-ground of his character while writ-

Hooked leaves readers fishing for realistic characters

PHOTO CHERIHAN HASSUN / THE UBYSSEY

One of the paintings on exhibit in the #westcoastbestcoast collection is Molly Lam Bobak’s Fishboats at the Mouth of the Fraser.

BOOK >>

Olivia LawSenior Staff Writer

Search the hashtag #westcoast-bestcoast on almost any social media platform — Instagram, Tumblr, Twitter, Pinterest — and you’ll be bombarded with a swarm of photos promoting the beauty of our edge of the continent.

And why not? All of us living in Vancouver know how blessed we are — where else in the world can you be within an hour of the beach, the mountains and the city? The celebratory hat tip we

use to revel in the privilege of living in such a naturally beauti-ful, sublime landscape is used to accompany landscape pictures of the west coast of British Colum-bia, Washington, Oregon and California, as a teasing nudge to our more eastern fellow Can-adians as they battle snow, ice and storms.

The AMS Permanent Collec-tion in the SUB’s Art Gallery is entitled just this: #westcoast-bestcoast. The cheeky nod to the materialism of our time is effect-

ively used to show the changes in our landscape and the portrayal of the increased industrialization over time.

Curated by UBC’s Erin Watkins, #westcoastbestcoast is a case study exploring the increasingly problematic issues surrounding the idealistic representation of the west coast landscape through progression of time, technology and popu-lar style. The famous ‘Group of Seven’ artists, known for their iconic landscape paintings are

ART >>

#westcoastbestcoast questions representations of west coast landscapes

PHOTO CHERIHAN HASSUN / THE UBYSSEY

UBC alum Michael Hetherington’s new thriller is about main character Adrian as he falls in passionless love with Mandy.

criticized for the reinforcement of ‘terra nullius’ — presenting the nation as an area of untouched nature, pristine and unseen by human eyes — when in fact the areas of land depicted in their works have been domin-ated and changed by humans for centuries.

One work in the #westcoast-bestcoast exhibition is entitled “Development #1”, by Vancouver artist Roy Arden. His work fea-tured all over the world, Arden is focused largely on industrial-ization of the natural environ-ment. His work which is featured in #westcoastbestcoast shows human development completely annihilating the once beautiful natural landscape. The emotional message is strengthened by the intense realism of his work. It could be suggested that Arden wanted the title of his work, “De-velopment #1”, to highlight the fact that there is no end to the destruction of the earth — this site is just one of many.

Another work in the collec-tion again makes the viewer ponder the ‘naturalization’ of a landscape. Ron Tran’s “It Knows Not What It Is” piece is not a landscape, it is an applique stick on a banner. The removal of this stick from its natural world is a subtle reminder of the destruction of our earth. This certainly provokes thought into the concept of #westcoastbest-coast — how can something be ‘the best’ when we are changing it, adapting it, taking everything natural and making our sublime landscape artificial. The title of this work also places blame of the natural world onto the viewer, or the people, which perhaps brings about a reflection into

the new generations. If the stick is removed from the landscape, changing the natural beauty, what will be left for the children of the future? The stick may not know what it is, but neither will the next generation.

There is one First Nations piece in the exhibition, an un-titled work by Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun, an internationally renowned political, environ-mental and cultural documenter. His work revokes a traditional Salish style, but is broken up with large, imposing numbers and patterns, suggesting the intrusive presence of the western colonizers. The juxtaposing col-ours and patterns is suggested, as per the accompanying plaque, to be a ‘jab’ at the construction of UBC, a place of learning, on the Musqueam territories.

Lawren S. Harris’s “Mountain Spirit” evokes a strong sense of spirituality in the viewer. Based upon the Northern Lights, Harris fuses elements of earth, water and sky into a unified depiction of the world. Contrasted with strong, geometric motifs, how-ever, there is a definite under-lying tone of futurism which contrasts from the traditional sublimity of the west coast.

Although many of the pieces in the #westcoastbestcoast collec-tion demonstrate an approach akin to the realism of the ‘Group of Seven’, several of the works are moving towards abstraction — highlighting the abstract view we have of this popular hashtag. Coming away from the exhibit, one is filled with thoughts of a conscious nature — why are we so keen to change this beautiful landscape of which we appear to be so proud? U

ing. “It kind of came up as I went along,” the author said. Hethering-ton opted to create the characters as he wrote the story rather than de-velop them and reveal the character throughout the story.

The book was written in less than two months, a short time if we consider the complexity of setting up a plot and its characters. “The story all poured it out of me in about seven and a half weeks,” said Heth-erington, adding “I wrote at a daily quota of about 3,000 words a day.” This impressive rhythm reassured the coherence of the novel’s action scenes.

Editors’ cuts nonetheless prevented Hetherington from tying together the plot. “When I first wrote the book ... the final scene was about at least twice as long, if not three times as long, and it was a lot more gruesome,” said Hetherington.

It also had the consequence of gathering characters that seemed to have almost no relation to one an-other. Once edited, the climax of the thriller simply leaves a number of questions, as secondary characters who hover around Adrian end up never stepping fully into the story.

One could say this adds to the mystery, it could also push the read-er to shrug their shoulders without looking for an explanation they know cannot be guessed anywhere in the book.

With lacklustre characters and an anticlimactic ending, Hooked is a pleasant read past the oddness of some of its scenes, but does not im-merse the reader due to a depiction of action and characters. U

Page 6: Nov 27, 2014

6 | CULTURE | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014

Date: Wednesday, December 3, 2014 Time: 4:30 - 6:00 PMPlace: Commons Room, MBA House, 3385 Wesbrook Mall

You are invited to attend an Open House on Wednesday, December 3 to view and comment on the proposed new National Soccer Development Centre located within Thunderbird Park in the Athletics Precinct.

National Soccer Development CentrePublic Open HouseNotice of Development Permit Application - DP 14036

Plans will be displayed for the proposed new 3,400m2 National Soccer Development Centre, a joint project between UBC Athletics and the Vancouver Whitecaps Football Club. Representatives from the project team and Campus + Community Planning will be available to provide information and respond to inquiries about this project.An update will also be provided on the Thunder-bird Park Precinct Plan. For more information on this project, please visit: planning.ubc.ca/vancouver/projects-consultations

For further information: Please direct questions to Karen Russell, Manager Development [email protected] 604-822-1586

This event is wheelchair accessible.

Lawrence Neal GarciaSenior Staff Writer

WARNING: Will push human na-ture to its limits.

It’s the cautionary notice on Es-cape from Sunset Island, a board game — a zombie apocalypse simulator to be exact — created by two brothers and UBC alumni, Robert and Daniel Straker.

The game has one objective: get off the island before you become a zombie. And although the gameplay is simple — it uses basic tokens, intuitive mechanics and a straightforward layout -- the

interplay is much more complex.The idea for the game came to

Robert Straker while he was work-ing at a before-and-after school care center, where he would routinely think up games for the kids to play. Although not a board game junkie himself — though by his own admission, he probably plays more than the average person -- Straker thought of making a simple zom-bie-themed one that the kids could play on Halloween.

Two years later, with the help of his brother Daniel, he turned that initial idea into what is now

Escape from Sunset Island — doing everything from learning Photoshop, finding a manu-facturer and starting a small Kickstarter project, to make it a reality.

The game is currently in its first production run of 500 units.

With six character cards (plus a zombie card), resource items (food, water, gas), weapons and more, the game — which can be learned in just a few minutes — quickly comes together in a race for survival.

Unlike in most games however, the focus of Escape from Sunset Island is more about avoiding the zombies than it is about killing them (though there are oppor-tunities to do so, with chainsaws, guns and the like). In that sense, the zombie angle — in itself not a novel idea — is somewhat periph-eral to the game itself.

“It’s just a good game whether they are zombies are not. Lots of games rely on the zombies to carry it. But … you could call them coyotes if you wanted,” said Straker.

UBC alumni create zombie apocalypse board game Escape from Sunset IslandBOARDGAMES >>

The game is also what Straker describes as “co-petitive,” a blend of cooperative and competitive gameplay rather than strictly one or the other. Beyond the zombie setup, it’s the group dynamics that result from this approach that liven the game, ensuring a different experience each time.

“You’re not told wheth-er to cooperate or compete … Some people just assume it’s cooperative; some people don’t,” said Straker. “You’re just trying to get off the island, so you can do it however you want.”

It’s also why the game, while sim-ple in framework, is more complex than it would seem.

“It’s always different. And that’s what makes it interesting for me to play with people still, I get to see how people approach it,” said Straker, who recounted games with people who simply shot each other and where no one sur-vived, or others where the players counted it a victory if even just one person escaped.

In that respect, the game is less about the zombies, and more about how people react to them.

And like the best of games, it’s harder to win than one might think, requiring a good mix of strategy and luck. It also often requires some form of cooperation for success — whether players realize it or not. This element also speaks to the underlying philosophy of the game, which Straker summed up with a line from Robert Frost’s The Tuft of Flowers: “‘Men work together,’ I told him from the heart, / ‘Whether they work together or apart.’”

Escape from Sunset Island is cer-tain to delight gamers and non-gam-ers alike. Whether they’ll actually escape or not is a different question entirely. U

PHOTO CHERIHAN HASSUN/ THE UBYSSEY

Ubyssey editors and writers had an opportunity to try out the game with one of its creators, Robert Straker.

Campus has a new watering hole: BierCraft

BEER >>

Jenica MontgomeryCulture Editor

A new pub opened on campus — and it wants you to know it’s not just a drinking joint . BierCraft has been an anticipated new addition to campus since last April. They opened their doors to the public in early November.

Joining the ranks of Koerners pub, Mahony & Sons and — of course — the Pit pub, BierCraft offers a comfortable environment that’s not just for getting your Friday night drink on. From the separate dining rooms to the menu, BierCraft makes it known that it is restaurant, not a pub or bar.

Staying true to its name, BierCraft offers a wide array of beers, both on tap and bottled, for patrons to try. For those who are adventurous beer drinkers, the restaurant has both bottled domestic craft beer and imported craft beer — mostly from Belgium and Germany. Though not the largest international beer collec-tion, the restaurant provides a good starting point for beginner beer connoisseurs.

The spirits drink menu, as expected from a beer-centric restaurant, is sparse but has the basics: mojitos, caesars, etc. So if beer isn’t your drink of choice

BierCraft still has you covered.The restaurant is divided into

two sections — a separate dining section for all ages and a bier house themed section where minors must be accompanied by an adult. Both sections serve the same food and drinks, making the only real difference the aesthetic ambiance of the two segments. The bier house themed section of the restaurant has high ceilings, wood pillars and stained glass lining the top of the bar, catering to the Belgium bier house aesthetic.

BierCraft has a surprisingly large menu. From burgers to muscles to charcuterie platters; Biercraft doesn’t lack in culinary options. However, beer and wing lovers beware — BierCraft does not offer the wing selection that many other pubs do. Hot wing and beer lovers will find better deals elsewhere.

It comes as no surprise that the feel of BierCraft is warm and inviting, however, it is slightly expensive for what a student would reasonably spend on a beer and some poutine.

Whether you’re looking for an international beer or a casual dinner with friends, BierCraft will most likely have something suitable for a hungry and thirsty university student. U

Page 7: Nov 27, 2014

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | 7STUDENT VOICE. COMMUNITY REACH.

Date: Wednesday, January 7, 2015 Time: 11:30 AM - 1:30 PMPlace: War Memorial Gymnasium Lobby, 6081 University Boulevard

For more information on this project, please visit: planning.ubc.ca/vancouver/projects-consultations

For further information: Please direct questions to Karen Russell, Manager Development [email protected] 604-822-1586

Representatives from the project team and Campus + Community Planning will be available to provide information and respond to inquiries about this project.

The public is also invited to attend the Development Permit Board Meeting for this project to be held on January 21st from 5:00-7:00pm, at the Centre for Interactive Research on Sustainability (CIRS) Policy Labs A+B, 2260 West Mall.

You are invited to attend an Open House on Wednesday, January 7 to view and comment on a mixed-use development proposal for University Boulevard - Site B. Plans will be displayed for a new 6-storey mixed use building with retail/commercial uses on the ground floor and 5 storeys of residential rental accommodation for students, faculty and employees at UBC.

University Boulevard - Site BPublic Open HouseNotice of Development Permit Application - DP 14027

BOG MAY NOT BE ELECTED, BUT THEY SHOULD STILL BE REPRESENTATIVE On Tuesday morning, our news editor made her way on over to the Isabel MacInnes room in the Gage commonsblock to sit in on the last Board of Governors standing committee meeting of 2014.

However, she had to put the live-tweeting on hold as guests to the meeting were shooed out while the Board discussed the first two motions on their agenda, including one on international tuition.

The meeting wasn’t open to the public until 10:30 a.m., nearly an hour after its scheduled start time. Once everyone settled in, administrators chatted about new development proposals on cam-pus for a half hour before moving into closed session once again.

While it’s true that the Board does have the power to change their meeting agendas whenever necessary, this isn’t exactly the best policy.

Transparency should be, and is, one of UBC’s top priorities. But with the massive tides of criticism crashing administra-tion in light of their recent fee increase proposals, students are making clear their need for more openness.

Being able to adjust to cir-cumstances through methods like altering agendas at the last

minute is an important power for the BoG to have — but it also is a power that has the potential to be abused. Especially in regard to controversial topics like fee increases.

Government transparency is a fundamental aspect of democ-racy, and when the federal gov-ernment of a country seems to be more open than a government of a university of 50,000 (relatively) politically engaged, or at least informed, people there’s a prob-lem. Representative democracy is a point that Canada and many other developed nations pride themselves on. One would hope that the BoG would at least try to appear to live up to this standard of representation by openly dis-cussing issues that their constitu-ents care about.

RIDICULOUS ASSERTIONS OF REVERSE RACISM

A UBC history professor has become another target of Brad Saltzberg, a man who has gained quite a reputation for sending out anti-Chinese and anti-immigra-tion letters to various Vancouver organizations. A few days ago, Saltzberg started a petition that demands that Henry Yu, who teaches Asian-Canadian history, B.C. immigration patterns and social theory at UBC, be fired from his job. In the petition, Saltzberg accuses Yu of ‘reverse racism’ against people of Euro-pean descent for talking about

the discrimination that Asian Canadians have historically faced in B.C.

We deliberated whether to write about this situation in an article, but ultimately decid-ed that covering it without the necessary context (that, unfortu-nately, a news article cannot always provide) would give the petition a platform that it does not deserve and should never have. Instead, we thought it was important to point out just how truly warped the situation is: merely talking about the hist-ory of minority groups and the difficulties that they face can put one at risk of being accused of ‘reverse racism’. What’s more, it is completely unacceptable that a professor doing scholarly work on Asian-Canadian history can spur the kind of hate and malice that we have seen with this petition.

And some people think that racism is a thing of the past? U

LAST WORDS PARTING SHOTS AND SNAP JUDGEMENTS FROM THE UBYSSEY EDITORIAL BOARD

While it’s been a very slow couple of weeks in the news section, our blog seems to have a bustling audience made up of folks with one common passion — Carter the coyote.

Sure, I get it, Carter is adorable, and he’s a great model for candid snapshots, but his growing fame just isn’t doing him any good. Ac-tually, it could get him killed.

The dozens, or at this point, probably hundreds, of social media posts about Carter make him out to be a menace to the squirrel populace, but I can hardly take him seriously when a student isn’t afraid to stand only a few metres away to take a picture of him. We shouldn’t be so comfortable with him, and he definitely shouldn’t be comfortable with us.

Carter should be out wandering around the woods, terrorizing crit-ters and startling individuals brave enough to venture into Pacific Spirit Park, where I suppose he may call home. He’s a predator and a scavenger — but changing his ad-dress to UBC’s campus is making him more of the latter.

Though there are plenty of squirrels around for Carter to chase and chew on, he has a hard time hunting when campus is constantly flooded with students. He’s clearly not afraid of us, but he’s been smart enough to keep his distance thus far. And this divide means having to wait until night-fall to ease his munchies.

When the squirrels are tucked away to sleep, Carter has no choice but to rummage through our garbage to feed himself. Not a lot of UBC’s trash is very accessible to him, what with all of the bins only being accessible through small holes at the top made for human arms, not grasp-less coyote paws.

Really, there’s not much here for Carter at all. I’m sure he’s getting sick of eating little scraps of trash and waiting for class hours to terrorize the squirrels. And as he gets more and more used to all the human folk around, he’s going to start coming to us for dinner.

No, that doesn’t mean he’s going to start hunting students or bully-ing them for their lunch money. He will, however, schmooze his furry little self into our hearts and souls, and more importantly, our tupperware.

Folks need to give Carter his space, and if they’re not afraid, shoo him away. Don’t let his puppy dog eyes fool you — feeding him or letting him get too comfortable on campus is no good for him.

The sad reality is that if we don’t help him find his way back home soon, Carter may very well grow dependent on us, or may sim-ply become too accustomed to the presence of humans and become unable to reintegrate himself into the wild. At that point, if and when animal control services need to intervene, he will likely need to be put down.

It’s okay to love Carter, but the relationship just has to be long distance. Humans and coyotes can definitely coexist — just not neces-sarily in such close quarters. U

Coyotes aren’t pets: scare Carter off for his sake and yours

EDITORIAL >>

NEWS EDITORJOVANA VRANIC

ILLUSTRATION JULIAN YU/THE UBYSSEY

LAST WORDS >>

Page 8: Nov 27, 2014

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Page 9: Nov 27, 2014

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | 9EDITOR JACK HAUEN

Natalie Scadden Senior Staff Writer

When the UBC Thunderbirds swim team stormed the Max Bell Aquatic Centre in Lethbridge this weekend and took home both Canada West Championship banners, it almost seemed like déjà vu.

It was another dominant per-formance where T-Bird swimmers missed the podium in just one of 38 races. UBC again picked up awards for best male and female swimmers and rookies. Head coach Steve Price was again coach of the year for both teams.

And, due to scheduling changes within the conference that moved the championships to November, this was actually the second time UBC has done all of this in 2014.

Back in January, UBC had taken its swimming dominance at Canada West Championships to a whole new level: the women’s side put up a whopping 1,071 points with a 497-point margin of vic-tory — both conference records. Now it seems those kind of num-

bers are just par for the course with this team. Competing with one fewer swimmer this time around, the UBC women managed 1,049 points and were 409 ahead of second-place Calgary, while the UBC men gave themselves a much bigger cushion than they did last time, finishing 360 points ahead of Alberta and becoming the first men’s team in Canada West hist-ory to break the 1000-point mark.

A team operating at such a high level almost needs another way of measuring its performance than banners — its success is about more than just winning.

It’s about consistency and leadership. Take King for ex-ample. In five years as a Thunder-bird, the two-time Olympian has collected 20 gold, two silver and two bronze medals at Canada West along with four confer-ence Swimmer of the Year nods. She’s never lost the 400- and 800-metre freestyle.

But it hasn’t always been easy. King’s coach doesn’t think she was enjoying swimming very much last year. “To see her

come back this year with a great attitude and much more positive and enjoying the sport a lot more has had a really big impact on the girls’ team and for herself as well,” said Price.

It’s about the team effort. All 32 swimmers scored points — awarded to the top 16 swimmers in each event, from 20 points for first place to a single point for 16th. In fact, everyone cracked the top eight in at least one event. UBC won all six relays, swept the podium in six events and 20 different T-Birds won multiple individual medals.

And, of course, in a sport meas-ured in hundredths of a second, it’s about swimming fast. UBC swimmers broke 12 Canada West records this weekend, including three new marks set by Allen in the 100- and 200-metre butterfly and 100-metre backstroke, and two by Strydom in the 100- and 200-metre butterfly.

“Coleman is maturing and just rounding out the kind of athlete that he can be,” said Price of the three-time Canada West Swim-

mer of the Year. “He’s a very fiery and emotional guy, and some-times that gets the best of him as an athlete. I think he learned a lot about that this summer, and he’s really settled down and taking one swim at a time. And obviously winning a world cup medal boost-ed his confidence a lot. It’s just good to see a young man maturing and showing some leadership and being a real positive influence on the team.”

To top it off, in the last in-dividual event of the weekend, Keegan Zanatta erased the oldest record in the book by more than three seconds, winning the men’s 400-metre freestyle in 3:46.82 to replace Mark Johnston’s time from 2001.

With a convincing Canada West Championship behind them, the focus now shifts towards the 2015 CIS Championships in Victoria in February. The UBC women are seeking their fourth-straight national title, while the men will have to get past the two-time defending champions from the University of Toronto. U

UBC swimming sweeps Canada West — againSWIMMING >>

Women and men finish 409, 360 points in front of second place teams, respectively

PHOTOS COURTESY STEVE PRICE/UBC SWIM TEAM

WomenThe

MenThe

Swimmerof the year:

Savannah King

Swimmerof the year:

Coleman Allen

Rookieof the year:

Jacomie Strydom

Rookieof the year:

Yuri Kisil

Total Points

Total Points

1,049

1,007

Sixth Straight

Second Straight

CanWest title

CanWest title

(26th all-time)

(15th all-time)

Page 10: Nov 27, 2014

10 | SPORTS | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014

At OCAD U, we attract curious and creative students who expect something more from their education and are willing to challenge themselves to achieve it. Grounded in practice, theory, research and professionalism, with an eye on experimentation and change, we deliver advanced experiential learning. Our graduate students enjoy unrivalled opportunities to practice with expert art and design faculty, in studios, labs and through exceptional internships.

Programs O�ered:

• Contemporary Art, Design and New Media Art Histories (MA)

• Criticism & Curatorial Practice (MFA) • Digital Futures (MDes, MFA,

MA and Graduate Diploma)

• Inclusive Design (MDes) • Interdisciplinary Master’s in Art,

Media and Design (MDes, MFA, MA)

• Strategic Foresight and Innovation (MDes)

Application deadline: January 19, 2015.

GRADUATE STUDIESat OCAD University

For more information & to apply:Website: ocadu.ca/gradstudiesEmail: [email protected]: +1 416 977 6000 ext. 423Twitter: @OCADUgrad

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Ciaran Dougherty Copy Editor

In this new column I will be visiting different UBC athlet-ic clubs each week; I plan to recount my experiences to show exactly what we have on offer at the university.

The Quidditch pitch was the locale for my first outing so I laced up my cleats and headed over with my housemate, who happens to be a club member. On the way there he assured me that I would be, at some point, brutal-ly assaulted. While this did make me a little nervous, I took solace in the fact that my pain might at least provide some entertaining footage for our Weekly Show.

Despite my friend’s warn-ing, the team was immediately welcoming; one of the execs was quick to make jokes about my suitability for the game, largely due to me being from England. I had assumed that my accent would function in the same way as it does in everyday life; that is, making it easier to score.

Surprisingly, being English gives you no natural advantage at the sport.

We started with some com-fortable warm up drills before mounting our brooms. All players in this sport must remain on their brooms at all times unless they are knocked off, in which case they have to run back and touch their own hoops before they rejoin the action.

The sport is played with ex-treme similarity to how it is seen in the Harry Potter films. There are ‘Chasers’ who try to score with the ‘Quaffle’ through the opposition hoops and also defend their own hoops from opposition chasers. ‘Beaters’ try to knock ‘Chasers’ off their brooms using the ‘Bludgers’ and ‘Seekers’ chase after a human ‘Snitch.’

However, I was disappoint-ed to discover that those of the Quidditch persuasion are yet to find an effective way to combat gravity, meaning the whole game is played on the ground. While I considered this a big setback, it does mean you get a solid workout from the running; this, combined with the skill required to throw the balls and tackle other players, makes the sport quite difficult.

Our own team is increasing-ly successful, I spoke to UBC Quidditch’s President, Alexa Rowe, about the club’s perform-ance. “I’m actually very pleased … we had our first tournament with nine teams a couple week-ends ago, and the A team came first and B came second, so it was super awesome,” she said.

The club has 77 members and they compete in major competi-tions five times a year, including the Harry Potter inspired World Cup, which functions as the US national tournament, where hundreds of teams come together for the title.

After some drills we started a scrimmage, and a burly ‘Chaser’ from the other team immediately floored me. I initially felt like this was a little bit aggressive for someone new to the sport, but I later discovered that our hilari-ous sports editor arranged that to happen.

The team and its members were in fact warm and friend-ly with a great attitude to new players.

“You can never have too many people come out to play Quidd-itch, because it’s kind of a niche market. Not a lot of people are brave enough to come and try it out, so as many people as we can get, we’ll take them,” said Rowe.

The game is quite straight-forward and the team was excel-lent at making me feel welcome,

Ciaran goes clubbing: Quidditch

Upper body strength is integral to antigravity sport.PHOTO PETER SIEMENS/THE UBYSSEY

RECREATION >>

The Ubyssey’s copy editor endures a few hours of broomstick-based sporting

explaining little complexities and telling me where to stand. Despite the lack of flight and even though I was a bit rubbish, the whole experience was thoroughly en-

joyable. The club is inclusive, has good spirit and a genuine sense of humour.

If you like Harry Potter, or even if you just fancy trying your

hand at a new sport, I’d thorough-ly recommend Quidditch.

Check out the UBC Quidditch Team’s Facebook Page for more information. U

Page 11: Nov 27, 2014

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014 | SPORTS | 11

MASTER OF PUBLIC POLICY• One-year graduate degree program

• Located at the state-of-the-art University of Calgary Downtown Campus

• Tuition offsets are available

Learn more at policyschool.ucalgary.ca/studentsCome gain your competitive advantage

I force our team to buy Versace uniforms … sorry about the tuition hikes.

1. In three words, describe your personal style.

2. How do you incorporate your own style into your team uniform or athletic attire?

3. If you were to buy one accessory or item of clothing tomorrow, what would it be?

5. Who are you wearing?

4. What do you think is the worst crime against fashion happening at UBC?

I. Try. Hard. Chic, boho, with a touch — or gallon — of glitter.

Unique. Simple. Inspir-ing.

I like to think of myself as a young, up and coming Anna Wintour.

Classic Miami Vice.

Miley Cyrus buns on the field — nothing like dropping it low like Miley in the D. Oh and glitter.

I make sure I always change my pro-wrap headband colour to always stay “in” with the seasons’ best trends!

I will always incorporate a leopard-print banana hammock under my athletic attire.

Probably a fur jacket. Fur is in this season; all the animals are wearing it.

Ugh, a Celine bag … dream on Molly.

A scarf. The winter is slowly coming and it is an important acces-sory.

I have all the fashion accessories that are necessary. Soccer girls only need one thing and that’s their puffy jacket.

A camo doggy raincoat for my puppy, Maximus.

Sweatpants. Sweatpants are a sign of defeat. You lost control of your life so you bought some sweatpants.

High-waisted mom jeans without cringing a little — too much camel toe. And ‘larger than your head’ sock buns. Can’t even.

I don’t even know where to start. From leggings-rain boots-coat for girls to outdated outfits for guys.

The amount of grey on grey combinations my roommates are always reppin’.

Liking The Vod Lounge on Facebook and showing up over-dressed. No shoes, no shirt, more service!

Sweatpants and Louis Vuitton shoes.

I dabble. A little vintage, a little high fashion, and then my basic self always ends up with some item from Aritzia.

Who am I wearing? Brylle Kamen.

The better question would be who am I not wearing!

Sally Ann.

T-BIRDS 5-ON-5SPORTY AND STYLISH

LUKEREILLY

Swimming

MOLLY DRISCOLL

Field hockey

BRYLLEKAMEN

Basketball

MEAGANPASTERNAK

Soccer

CHARLIETHORPE

Rugby

I always try to be unique in every environment I’m in. Right now I wear pink and purple shoes on game day with matching socks.

Page 12: Nov 27, 2014

12 | GAMES | THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2014

ACROSS

1- Rum cakes 6- Corn covering 10- Permanent army post 14- Exodus origin 15- Abominable Snowman 16- Manipulator 17- Narrow mountain ridge 18- That’s ___! 19- In ___ land 20- PBS benefactor 21- Surrounded by ocean 24- Attendant 26- Rebuke 27- Period of history 28- Yoga posture 30- Marry again 33- You ___ right! 34- Engine part 37- Eye drop 38- 4th letter of the Greek alphabet 39- Linguist Chomsky 40- Naval rank, briefly 41- Takes on 42- Uptight 43- Band’s sample tapes 44- Test site 45- Adventurous expedition 48- Flightless bird 52- Easily decided 55- Neptune’s realm 56- Hairless 57- Bit 58- Inclined 60- Earth Day subj. 61- Box 62- Beethoven dedicatee 63- Actor Auberjonois 64- Roll call call 65- Travels on

DOWN

1- Legumes 2- Come to terms 3- One way to play 4- Suitable 5- Manciple 6- Hilton competitor 7- River to the Ubangi 8- Agitate 9- Polish sausage 10- Supports for a lever 11- City near Kobe 12- Sublease 13- Commerce 22- Gasteyer of “Saturday Night Live” 23- Vintner’s prefix 25- Change direction 28- City on the Rhone 29- Hardens 30- Numbered rd. 31- Bard’s nightfall 32- Has been 33- Dynamic start 34- Jailbird 35- Small batteries 36- Marseille Mrs. 38- Abate 39- Wyo. neighbor 41- Mother of Ares 42- Narc 43- Pamper 44- Baton Rouge sch. 45- Clear-headed 46- Expeditiously 47- Criminal 48- Chicago hub 49- Let me repeat... 50- Perfume the air 51- Can’t stand 53- Narcotic 54- The closest one to us is the sun 59- Biblical high priest

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Photo of the Day

PHOTO JUAN DANIEL LEANO

Beat exam stress with a tranquil weekend getaway to Lake Garibaldi. JD_LEANO93

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