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Ron Moeser (BA) – Toronto City Councillor for Ward 44 Scarborough East in Toronto, Ontario, Canada; William F. Bell (BA) – mayor of Richmond Hill, Ontario; Adam Crooks (LL.B.) – Treasurer of Ontario, 1872–77, Attorney General of Ontario, 1871–72, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Toronto West, 1871–74
The following is a partial list of University of Toronto faculty, including current, former, emeritus, and deceased faculty, and administrators at University of Toronto. To avoid redundancy, alumni who hold or have held faculty positions in the University of Toronto are placed on the list of alumni, and do not appear on this list of faculty.
The Faculty of Information was founded as the University of Toronto Library School within the Ontario College of Education in 1928 and was housed at 315 Bloor Street. [2] In 1965, the school was designated as an independent unit within the university and became known as the School of Library Science and thus moved it quarters to 167 College Street and 256 McCaul Street. [3]
Café 059 is a student café, currently located at 1 Spadina Crescent, that is under the operation of students from the Daniels Faculty. It moved buildings, but the original location was in the basement, Room 059 of the Infirmary (hence the name that still exists today), and originally launched by Enzo Bertucci, Anthony Provenzano and friends ...
This is a list of York University people. It includes notable graduates and faculty of the Toronto, Ontario, Canada institution, as well as graduates of Osgoode Hall Law School prior to its affiliation with York in 1969. See also Notable alumni of Osgoode Hall.
This is commonly identified as modern day replacement to the King's Counsel (KC) designation in the province of Ontario. [10] King's Counsel appointments have been restored in Ontario since the coronation of King Charles III. Ad. E. Lawyer Emeritus Quebec Bar [11] This is the post-1975 replacement for the title of King's Counsel in Quebec.
Fields's student, Samuel Beatty, was the first mathematics Ph.D. in Canada, obtaining his degree in 1915 (Beatty would later serve as head of the mathematics department and first president of the Canadian Mathematical Society in 1945). In the next twenty years, Toronto was to produce eight doctorates in mathematics, two of them women. [7]
Since then, the list of recognized research degrees has been constant, although most Ed.D. degree programs were determined to have a professional rather than research focus and removed from the survey in 2010–2011; despite this, the Ed.D. remains the second most popular research doctorate in the SED after the Ph.D in 2022.