Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Sports

A Quick Sketch Of The Next President Of The University Of British Columbia

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2016 11:39 AM
  • A Quick Sketch Of The Next President Of The University Of British Columbia
VANCOUVER — Here's a look at Santa Ono, the new president of the University of British Columbia:
 
Age: 53
 
Early Years: Born in Vancouver to a Japanese-born father who was a professor in UBC's math department. His family moved back to the U.S. a few years after he was born, and lived primarily in Baltimore.
 
His name: Ono and his brother are named after characters in Japanese folk stories, but his father removed a few letters from each. "My father, being a mathematician, likes to add and subtract," Ono said.
 
His brother's name is Momoro, after Momotaro, a folklore hero known as a "peach boy" because he was found by a childless couple inside a peach bobbing down a river. When Ono was born, his father decided to name him after a samurai character, Santaro.
 
"He removed the 'r' and 'o' from Santaro, and it became Santa, not knowing that he was setting me up for a lifetime of ridicule from October to December," Ono said.
 
Education: Holds a biology degree from the University of Chicago and an experimental medicine PhD from McGill University in Montreal. His primary research interests focus on the immune system and eye disease.
 
 
Professional Life: He has held positions at Emory University, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and University College London. He joined the University of Cincinnati in 2010 as provost before its board unanimously appointed him president in 2012.
 
Personal Life: Ono met his wife Wendy Yip at McGill. She is an accomplished immunologist and lawyer. Her late father was from Shanghai and taught at McGill, while her mother Dr. Alice Chan-Yip is a pediatrician and a member of the Order of Canada. Ono and Yip have two daughters, 18-year-old Juliana and 11-year-old Sarah.
 
Musical Interests: Ono is a cellist and studied at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore. He is avid music lover whose tastes range from Rihanna to Russian pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff.
 
Mental Health Advocacy: Ono spoke frankly about his mental health history at a fundraiser last month. The event was to commemorate a student who had killed himself in 2014.
 
Ono revealed that he had twice attempted suicide: once when he was 14 and the second time in his mid-20s. He said in a statement Monday that he aimed to spread awareness about mental illness and share his own struggles as a high-achieving student who battled and beat depression.
 
 
Quote: "Thank you for making it possible for this Vancouver boy to return home." — Ono speaking Monday during his introduction.

MORE Sports ARTICLES

Canada-England Encounter Looks To Be Another Nail-Biter At Women's World Cup

Canada-England Encounter Looks To Be Another Nail-Biter At Women's World Cup
Canada's two wins at the tournament — it also has two ties — have been by one-goal margins. Four of its last five matches with England were decided by one goal.

Canada-England Encounter Looks To Be Another Nail-Biter At Women's World Cup

Atiba Hutchinson, Milan Borjan Missing From Canada Squad For Gold Cup Tournament

Atiba Hutchinson, Milan Borjan Missing From Canada Squad For Gold Cup Tournament
VANCOUVER — Canada will be without influential midfielder Atiba Hutchinson and No. 1 goalkeeper Milan Borjan for next month's CONCACAF Gold Cup tournament.

Atiba Hutchinson, Milan Borjan Missing From Canada Squad For Gold Cup Tournament

Canada To Tackle England Next In Women's World Cup Quarter-Finals

Canada To Tackle England Next In Women's World Cup Quarter-Finals
The sixth-ranked Lionesses defeated No. 11 Norway 2-1 in Ottawa on Monday to set up a quarter-final showdown with No. 8 Canada in Vancouver on Saturday.

Canada To Tackle England Next In Women's World Cup Quarter-Finals

More Wins Means More Money For Teams Still In Contention At Women's World Cup

More Wins Means More Money For Teams Still In Contention At Women's World Cup
The eight teams that failed to advance out of the group stage left with $375,000 apiece. Teams five through eight make $725,000.

More Wins Means More Money For Teams Still In Contention At Women's World Cup

Coach John Herdman Says Christine Sinclair Makes Everyone On Team Better

Coach John Herdman Says Christine Sinclair Makes Everyone On Team Better
VANCOUVER — Known for her goal-scoring, Christine Sinclair turned provider in helping lift Canada to the Women's World Cup quarter-finals.

Coach John Herdman Says Christine Sinclair Makes Everyone On Team Better

Switzerland Exits World Cup On Classy Note, Calls Canada An 'Amazing Country'

Switzerland Exits World Cup On Classy Note, Calls Canada An 'Amazing Country'
VANCOUVER — Switzerland exited the Women's World Cup on a classy note Sunday — with a thank you to Canada.

Switzerland Exits World Cup On Classy Note, Calls Canada An 'Amazing Country'