The Apocalypse Will Be Tweeted
ZED.TO's interactive narrative experience simulates the end of the world
ZED.TO's interactive narrative experience simulates the end of the world
For this Fonthill, Ontario, couple it was a match made in music. And almost 65 years later, they’re still in tune
Victoria Nolan is dubbed “The Metronome” for her ability to row perfectly in synch with her teammates
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
Governing Council’s alumni members discuss the big issues ahead for U of T
How the Medical Sciences Building got its stripes
Genetic testing may reveal what pharmaceutical drugs work best for you, with the fewest side effects
Crispin Duenas will represent Canada in archery at the London Olympics
The Saudi Arabian city is wrestling with a transit problem of Koranic proportions
What’s the solution to Toronto’s traffic problems?
A new U of T research centre will investigate the curative power of music
At its simplest, music is just sound. And sound is just vibration. So how does it get inside us, and influence us?
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
Milestones over more than a century
The Toronto region is a great home for a global university
Traumatologist Dr. Homer Tien advises that you don’t waffle
Two U of T students recommend reparations for victims of child soldiers in Uganda
Prof. Catherine Heard recently instructed each of the 17 students in her class to create a graphic novelette
Victoria University, the Faculty of Arts and Science and the Tanz Centre recently launched their own campaigns
U of T engineers use playing cards to replicate a Paris landmark
Eugenia Duodu wins award for her research into targeting cancerous cells, and for teaching kids science
As students and faculty snap up smartphones, U of T aims to make Wi-Fi fast and ubiquitous
Mellon Foundation grant will bring leading post-doctoral scholars to U of T’s Jackman Humanities Institute
Doris McCarthy’s life’s work finds a permanent home at U of T Scarborough
Graduating engineering students raise thousands for their faculty
U of T researchers have devised a way to refurbish donor lungs before they’re transplanted
A forestry prof believes a local parasite could help protect Ontario’s ash trees from a deadly invader
What can a computer reveal about a work of fiction? Plenty, it seems
The simple, inexpensive device matches the function of far more costly technology
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
The challenge to improve online dating
ABC correspondent Muhammad Lila reports from Pakistan and Afghanistan
In Katrina Onstad’s new novel, a couple gets a crash course in raising a child
Measha Brueggergosman hits gold with a new album, a TV show and an opera
The heart wants what the heart wants, but Mehreen and Arsalan offer a lesson in the virtues of patience
Jothi Shanmugam is devoted to bringing together communities for change
Charlotte Gill reminisces about life as a professional tree planter
A Cocksure Lad
Dr. Vera Peters saved lives with her treatments for breast cancer and Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Sarah Truman travelled across China looking for the Bodhisattva of compassion. What she experienced was a change inside herself
What started as a regular U of T alumni event for Jiyoung Park turned into something much, much more
Second-year student Patrick Simeon is crowned champion of Hart House's tri-campus singing competition
Laura Suen, a recent U of T grad, placed second in the CBC show Canada's Smartest Person
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
Faculty of Law launches a $53-million campaign
A new institute will study the country’s successes
After surviving a difficult childhood, teacher and writer Lee Maracle provides counsel to others at First Nations House
Ground broken on Goldring Centre, opening expected early in 2015
Yasmin Razavi helps students start their own businesses
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