Accessible Excellence
U of T’s evergreen commitment to student aid
U of T’s evergreen commitment to student aid
Ed Barbeau uses math puzzles to encourage analytical and innovative thinking
Support for medical students is a key plank of the Faculty of Medicine’s campaign
A book collector for more than 40 years, Michael Walsh has acquired several thousand antiquarian volumes of western philosophy
New Rotman School of Management building opens on St. George Street
New degree program designed to promote understanding between Christians and Muslims
New chancellor Michael Wilson is pumped to champion University of Toronto spirit
Is ‘one’ really the loneliest number?
Was the War of 1812 actually a civil war?
Wattpad co-founder Allen Lau predicts a book publishing revolution
Author Andrew Blum follows the wires behind the Web
How Saad Siddiqui used martial arts to kick-start an acting career
For this Fonthill, Ontario, couple it was a match made in music. And almost 65 years later, they’re still in tune
Toronto Jazz Festival’s Josh Grossman wants audiences to open their ears to something new
Lisa Bryn Rundle talks with Degrassi co-creator on teaching and television
Alumni feel the joie at the Vari home
Crispin Duenas will represent Canada in archery at the London Olympics
What’s the solution to Toronto’s traffic problems?
Forty years ago, an intrepid group of professors and students sparked progress for women across U of T
Myrna Kostash reflects upon the new women's studies course at the University of Toronto in a 1972 Miss Chatelaine article
The Toronto region is a great home for a global university
Two U of T students recommend reparations for victims of child soldiers in Uganda
Doris McCarthy’s life’s work finds a permanent home at U of T Scarborough
Graduating engineering students raise thousands for their faculty
What can a computer reveal about a work of fiction? Plenty, it seems
You don’t need an Olympic training regimen to get healthy through exercise
Chinese propaganda posters from the 1960s celebrate work as an act of nation-building
ABC correspondent Muhammad Lila reports from Pakistan and Afghanistan
The heart wants what the heart wants, but Mehreen and Arsalan offer a lesson in the virtues of patience
A Cocksure Lad
Sarah Truman travelled across China looking for the Bodhisattva of compassion. What she experienced was a change inside herself
Researchers are developing better ways to detect serious illnesses before they become life-threatening – and while they’re still treatable
From X-rays to MRI
U of T’s Northrop Frye conceded that other scholars were “infinitely more accurate” than he. But he claimed to have something they lacked – genius
Moncton’s annual Frye Festival attracts thousands, including many distinguished authors
Northrop Frye kept three personal libraries, but wasn't above throwing away books he was finished with
With the discovery of hundreds of worlds around other stars, will we find that Earth is not alone in bearing life?
Exciting, dynamic growth is happening at U of T's east and west campuses
Faculty of Law launches a $53-million campaign
A new institute will study the country’s successes
A U of T grad student and alumnus created music for the launch of the Boundless campaign in just three weeks
Rather than warning students away from Wikipedia, some professors are now embracing it
New College celebrates a half-century with a new scholarship
An award for black medical students honours a Toronto surgeon
Thinner, more flexible displays could radically change how we use and experience computers
Suneet Singh Tuli has engineered an affordable tablet computer for the developing world
Avis Glaze fights for the kids who struggle in class
They flirted during undergrad but eventually lost touch. Then along came Facebook
John P. Racine reflects on how his life has changed since the earthquake in Japan
Donald Sutherland performs in Hart House Theatre’s The Tempest
Grad Asim Hussain believes in the power of books to help people reach their full potential
In which God may or may not be Margaret Atwood
They may have reverse effect of what they intend, U of T Scarborough psychologists find
What one of the world’s largest mortality studies is teaching us about public health
Why improving the well-being of people in other countries should concern Canadians
A University of Toronto lab is harnessing computers to make life better as we age
Rotman’s international study tours taught Michael Odam the ins and outs of doing business in low-income countries
Physics undergrad Aysha Abdel-Aziz is making her own unique contribution to a massive international research project
U of T’s new campaign
U of T launches a historic $2 billion fundraising campaign