The Lives of Animals
Most animals raised for food in Canada live on industrial sites where they never go outdoors. Under our laws, this is perfectly legal, but is it ethical?
Most animals raised for food in Canada live on industrial sites where they never go outdoors. Under our laws, this is perfectly legal, but is it ethical?
U of T is helping to create a culture of innovation
Arts and Science proposal would enhance undergraduate learning and eliminate deficit, says dean
Landmark donation brings medical academy to Mississauga
Normand Labrie coped with sweltering heat and noisy classrooms to bring Canadian teaching techniques to India's largest city
U of T libraries and bookstore adapt to the iPad era
Scientists discover unusual die-off in sugar-maple leaves due to high spring temperatures
A behavioural scientist offers new criteria for defining how much is too much
There are plenty of compelling reasons for health records to go digital. So why are some doctors resisting?
Surveillance and surgery could both get a boost from a new kind of video camera that can focus on near and distant objects at the same time
BP oil spill could have been avoided if the company had used the "precautionary principle," says prof
Architecture prof's Arctic designs include proposed Russia-Alaska rail link
Religion meets banking in a new course at Rotman
Hart Hanson blends crime and comedy on his hit Fox TV show
Erika Savage is helping to pioneer a new kind of recording contract at Universal Music Group
Shelley Saywell explores so-called “honour killings” in her new film
In her new book, author Marni Jackson searches for the right level of involvement in her adult son's life
What information studies grad won a spot on Jeopardy, got her Daily Double right and found out something surprising while on set?
The first phase of renovations to the 86-year-old monument is now underway
Cadets get ready to serve in the First World War, on St. George Campus
The culture and language you are raised with can affect your ability to judge the age of people's faces
Iranian students and professors reflect on the future of their home country
For talented young opera singers, a four-week program in Italy is music to the ears
Discoveries of new planets outside our solar system are forcing astronomers to rethink theories of how planets form
Should towers be visible behind Queen's Park? An architecture grad fights to safeguard the view of Toronto's most important heritage building
New technique using X-rays could help forensic scientists identify the dead
Reproductive science has made huge strides over the past 30 years, bringing hope to millions of infertile couples. But some formidable barriers remain
Even with the best medical technology, most women over 40 have little chance of getting pregnant
Quebec covers three cycles, but most provinces don’t cover infertility treatment
Solar panels at the Athletic Centre, composting in residence, farming on St. George. What next? A back campus wind turbine?
Residence program seeks to change how students think about energy use and conservation
Claude Bissell’s visit to China, at a time of political isolation between the West and China, foreshadowed the spirit of international exchange at U of T today
U of T's eighth president recognized the importance of the university's global reputation
Claude Bissell’s final term as U of T president ended almost 40 years ago, but his remarkable contribution as a scholar, administrator and leader is recognized on the St. George Campus today, with buildings, portraits and other tributes honouring Bissell’s legacy
U of T is rising to the global sustainability challenge
Every year, Arthur Weis welcomes more than 500 undergrads to Koffler Scientific Reserve
Three of his daughters were killed by Israeli fire. In Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish’s new book, he calls for an end to the violence
Isaac Olowolafe Jr. donates $25,000 to help students in New College's African Studies program
Trips to the Arctic inspired scholarship for aboriginal students
Some U of T students go out of their way to express how much they appreciate their favourite prof
Professor Natalie Zemon Davis gives new life to history’s outsiders
Caravaggio rebelled against dogma and received wisdom. Is that why we like him so much?
What kind of films are part of the "mumblecore" movement?
Physicist John Rowlands has invented a way to deliver high-quality X-rays at a fraction of the regular cost
Architecture grads imagine new forms of city housing
An idea for managing the fastest-growing segment of health-care costs
In a creative rut? Renegade computer designer Bill Buxton advocates less work and more play
Rumeet Toor launches a teacher’s college in rural Kenya
Westerners who reject mainstream culture as “inauthentic” may, in fact, be status seekers, says Andrew Potter
In artist Luis Jacob's new exhibition, bodies are framed within the environment and surroundings are incorporated into bodies
"We've been married for more than 30 years now, and it’s been quite the adventure"
U of T awards Mississauga mayor Hazel McCallion an honorary degree
Gold medalist Heather Moyse talks to Lisa Bryn Rundle about her Olympic journey
Campus growth high on the agenda for Governing Council members
Bruce Kidd participates in the Queen’s Baton Relay – the first of two times
Computer engineering student Vincent Cheung's photo software has become an Internet hit
Psychology research finds that conservatives are more concerned with order, liberals are more compassionate
A new campus group wants to send leftover books from college book sales to schools that could use them
Now that the Large Hadron Collider is working, U of T physicists are preparing to sift through mountains of data in search of the elusive Higgs boson
How did first-year student (and former tomboy) Anna Cunningham end up writing a fashion column online?