YORK UNIVERSITY

:''This article is about the Canadian university. For the British university, see University of York.''
'York University' (French: ''Université York''), located in Toronto, Ontario, is Canada's third-largest university and has produced several of the country's top leaders in the fields of law, politics, business, space sciences, and fine arts. York supports a student population of approximately 50,000 and staff of 7,000, as well as 200,000 alumni worldwide. It is home to 11 faculties, including the Schulich School of Business, Osgoode Hall Law School and the Faculty of Environmental Studies, as well as 23 research centres. A young university, it has been growing over time and gaining international recognition in several fields most notably law and management as reflected by the joint programs it now has with New York University and Northwestern University respectively. York University has always enjoyed a strong participation in the Canadian Space Program and the Faculty of Science and Engineering has designed several space research instruments and applications currently used by NASA.
U of T ROCKS!

Contents
History
Academics
Faculties
Libraries
Athletics
Campuses
Major buildings (Keele Campus)
Accolade East and West
Accolade East
Accolade West
Curtis Lecture Halls and the Ross Building
Vari Hall
York Commons
York Lanes
Fraternities and Sororities
Students
Colleges
Faculties and abbreviations
Seneca@York
Transit
Security Services
Controversies
Presidents
Chancellors
Noted alumni
Politicians
Judges
Business Leaders
Artists
Scientists
Athletes
Broadcasters
Other
Noted faculty
External links
References

History


Logo of the university

York University was founded in 1959, by virtue of the ''York Act'', which received Royal Assent in the Ontario Legislature on March 26 of that year. Its first class was held on September 1960, in Falconer Hall on the University of Toronto campus with a total of 76 students. In the fall of 1961, York moved to the Glendon campus, and began to emphasize liberal arts and part-time adult education. Murray Ross, a figure that continues to be honoured today at the University in several ways, was York's first President.
Murray Ross was still vice-president of the University of Toronto (UofT) when approached to become York U's new president. At the time, York U was envisioned as a feeder campus to UofT, until Ross's powerful vision led it to become a completely separate institution. ''(Ross 1992).''
In 1965, York moved into its permanent home on the Keele campus. The campus, located at the northern edge of the City of Toronto, was regarded as somewhat isolated, in a generally industrialized part of the city. Petrol storage facilities are still located across the street. Some of the early architecture was unpopular with many, not only for the brutalist designs, but the vast expanse between buildings, which was not viewed as suitable for the climate. In the last two decades, the campus has been intensified with new buildings, including a dedicated student centre and new fine arts, computer science and business administration buildings, as well as a small shopping mall, and hockey arena. The Rexall Centre tennis stadium, built in 2004, is a perennial host of the Canada Masters tennis tournament. As Toronto has spread further out, York has found itself in a relatively central location within the built-up Greater Toronto Area (GTA), and in particular, near the Jane and Finch neighbourhood. Its master plan envisions a denser on-campus environment commensurate with that location.

Academics


View from Vari Hall

York University attracts and grooms some of the most promising students of Canada and has produced the current directors and CEOs of almost all the major banks in Canada (Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, TD Bank, BMO), the largest and most prominent media networks in Canada (CTV, Rogers Communications, CBC), and numerous judges, diplomats, and senior politicians including the current Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal of Canada, the Minister of Finance of Canada, the Attorney General of Ontario, the President of the Privy Council of Canada and the Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations.
Astronaut Steve MacLean was educated at York University in the physics department and later taught there before going to work at NASA.
Canada's youngest billionaire, Alex Shnaider, is also a graduate of York University.
York's approximately 1,350 full-time faculty and academic librarians are represented by the York University Faculty Association. Contract faculty, teaching assistants, and graduate assistants are represented by CUPE Local 3903.
Faculties

York University has eleven faculties. Several of these faculties' programs overlap. The Faculties of Arts, Science & Engineering, Liberal & Professional Studies (Atkinson), and Glendon College, for instance, each house separate mathematics departments, although some of these are being merged; the Schulich School of Business (which ranked 1st among Canadian business schools in 2006 by The Economist, The Financial Times, and Forbes and 3rd in the world in a global ranking of MBA programs conducted by the Aspen and World Resources Institutes, two US think tanks) offers undergraduate and graduate International Business Administration programmes, but the Atkinson Faculty of Liberal and Professional Studies' School of Administrative Studies acts as a completely separate business school, nevertheless both Atkinson and Schulich share many full time professors. Also, Atkinson, Glendon, and Schulich units are offering or are in the processing of preparing to offer degrees in public policy and administration. The University administration has, however, taken steps in some cases to unify departments in separate faculties, in part to support York's efforts to brand itself as a university focused on interdisciplinarity. For example, the Faculty of Health, opened on 1 July 2006, houses the School of Health Policy & Management, School of Kinesiology and Health Science, School of Nursing, and the Department of Psychology (one of the largest in North America).
The Osgoode Hall Law School is one of Canada's oldest and most prestigious law schools, having moved from a downtown location to the York campus in 1969 following the requirement that every law school affiliate with a university. The law school is a top tier internationally recognized institution with several flexible degrees available including the Osgoode-NYU JD/LLB degree in conjunction with New York University School of Law.
York University offers the first and largest Graphic Design program in Ontario (Bachelor of Design Honours degree)[1]. It is a four-year University degree delivered jointly by the two leading educational institutions of design in Canada, York University and Sheridan College and recognized throughout North America for maintaining the highest academic and professional standards. The alumni demonstrate the excellence of the program through their placements into top design firms, national and international graduate study programs and their high rate of self-employment. The student’s talent and dedication reflects itself at every opportunity. Students have received much recognition in regional, national and international competitions, and with private and government agencies in Canada, the USA and Europe. Retention is the highest in the university, in the mid 90s. Many students have received multiple offers to the leading graduate programs throughout the world in the fields of Design, Architecture, Business, Law, Environmental Studies and Education.
York University's Faculty of Graduate Studies offers graduate degrees in a variety of disciplines, and there are several joint graduate programs with the University of Toronto and Ryerson University.
The Ph.D. program at York in Social and Political Thought consistently ranks as one of Canada's best PhD programs as reflected by the number of times York U students in this program have won the award for best PhD thesis in Canada.
The School of Women's Studies at York University offers a large array of courses in the field, some of which are offered in French.
The Canadian Centre for Germanic and European Studiesis co-housed at York University and Université de Montréal. The Centre is funded by the German Academic Exchange Service.
Research Centres & Institutes:
Canadian Centre for German and European Studies,
Centre for Atmospheric Chemistry,
Centre for Feminist Research,
Centre for International and Security Studies,
Centre for Jewish Studies,
Centre for Practical Ethics,
Centre for Public Law and Public Policy,
Centre for Refugee Studies,
Centre for Research in Earth and Space Science,
Centre for Research in Mass Spectrometry,
Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean,
Centre for Research on Work and Society,
Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability,
Institute for Research on Learning Technologies,
York Institute for Social Research,
The Jack and Mae Nathanson Centre for the Study of Organized Crime and Corruption,
LaMarsh Centre for Research on Violence and Conflict Resolution,
Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies,
York Centre for Asian Research,
York Centre for Vision Research,
York Institute for Health Research.
York is the only university in Canada to make Fine Arts its own faculty and has a world class art gallery (Art Gallery of York University at www.yorku.ca/agyu).The Faculty of Fine Arts is one of the most competitive in Canada, offering programs such as ethnomusicology and cultural studies as well as visual arts and music as well as dance and theatre. York's jazz department is particularly well-reputed and was once overseen by jazz great Oscar Peterson. York also has a joint Bachelor of Design program with Sheridan College. York's Departments of Film, Theatre and Creative Writing offer highly competitive programs in film production/directing, acting, and writing respectively, producing many award-winning graduates. The founder's of Toronto's critically acclaimed Hot Docs International Documentary Film Festival and CineACTION film theory magazine were graduates of York's Faculty of Fine Arts.
York offers a Space & Communication Sciences undergraduate degree. York’s Centre for Vision Research has developed a ‘virtual reality room’ called IVY (Immersive Virtual Environment at York) in order to study spatial orientation and perception of gravity and motion. The Canadian Space Agency and National Space Biomedical Research Institute (NSBRI) use this room to strengthen astronauts’ sense of ‘up’ and ‘down’ in zero-gravity environments. The room is a six-sided immersive environment made of the glass used in the CN Tower’s observation deck and includes walls, ceiling, and a floor comprised of computer-generated pixel maps. York's Faculty of Science and Engineering most recently took part in the 2007 NASA Phoenix Mission to Mars.
York is also the only university in Canada with specialized programs in meteorological sciences at both the undergraduate and graduate level.
Libraries

York's six libraries contain more than six-and-a-half million items including more than two million books and subscriptions to over 13,000 electronic journals. Scott Library is the largest of these and houses collections in the humanities, social sciences, and fine arts. Science-related items are at the Steacie Science Library, while the Osgoode Hall Law School houses the largest law library in the Commonwealth. The Leslie Frost library is located at Glendon College and houses collections in all disciplines with a significant proportion of research materials in the French language. The Peter F. Bronfman Business Library, in addition to print materials, gives access to dozens of e-resources such as the Bloomberg Terminal. Finally, the Clara Thomas Archives contains the literary and personal papers of many notable Canadian cultural figures such as Margaret Laurence, Rohinton Mistry, Adele Wiseman, bill bissett, and others.
The Government of Ontario announced in December 2006 that it would relocate the Archives of Ontario from rented facilities on Grenville Street to the Keele campus. A new building will house the archives and provide room for university researchers. The building is scheduled for completion in 2009.

Athletics


Pinky Ly sporting a York University dog t-shirt

The University is represented in Canadian Interuniversity Sport by the York Lions. Beginning in 1968 York's sporting teams were known as the "Yeomen", after the Yeomen Warders, the guardians of the fortress and palace at the Tower of London, otherwise known as Beefeaters. Later, the name "Yeowomen" was introduced to encourage women to participate in sports, as "Yeomen" was deemed to be gender-specific. Popular sentiment ran against this name scheme, however, as many students were fond of noting that a "Yeowoman" was fictitious, neither a real word nor having any historical merit. In 2003, after conducting an extensive internal study, the University replaced both names with the "Lions", as part of a larger re-branding effort, and a new logo, now a white and red lion, was brought into line with the university's new visual scheme. The name change also brought York University in line with the 92% of other Canadian universities which use a single name for both genders' sports teams. Ironically, students often refer to the female Lions teams as the "York Lionesses", despite the fact that the name "Lion" is intended to apply to both genders. [2]
SportYork offers 29 interuniversity sport teams, 12 sport clubs, 35 intramural sport leagues, special events and 10 pick-up sport activities offered daily.
York U has several athletic facilities, some of which are used for major tournaments. These include a football stadium, 4 gymnasia, 5 sport playing fields, 4 softball fields, 9 outdoor tennis courts, 5 squash courts, 3 dance/aerobic studios, an ice arena, a swimming pool, an expanding fitness centre and the new Rexall Centre (home of the Rogers Tennis Cup).
In 2005, plans were made to build a new football and soccer stadium to host the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League as well as future football tournaments. These plans were scuttled, however, when a deal was signed by the Argos to remain at the Rogers Centre. York's proximity to many of Toronto's cricket-playing communities and role as host of an annual "York is U" cricket tournament has led to speculation that the university might act as a permanent home for Canada's cricket program.

Campuses


Keele Campus, York's primary campus, is located in North York and most of the University's faculties reside here. The Schulich School of Business and Osgoode Hall Law School each have a satellite campus in the business district of Toronto, however. That of Schulich is the Miles S. Nadal Management Centre, and that of Osgoode Hall Law School is the Professional Development Centre and is located in the Dundas West Tower at the Toronto Eaton Centre.
Glendon College, a bilingual liberal arts faculty which conducts its own recruitment and admissions and hosts its own academic programs, is also housed on its own campus on Bayview Avenue in North Toronto. Glendon is the only university-level institution in Southern Ontario that offers university courses in both French and English; others elsewhere in Ontario include the University of Ottawa and Laurentian University in Sudbury. A shuttle bus runs regularly between the Glendon and the Keele campuses.
Major buildings (Keele Campus)

Accolade East and West

The Accolade Project comprises two new buildings, Accolade East and Accolade West, which frame the existing Fine Arts complex on the south side of The Common at the heart of York University's Keele campus. The new structures offer a wide range of academic, exhibition and performance facilities for teaching, learning, research, creative work and public presentation. The Accolade Project offers state-of-the-art facilities for Canada's future artists and performers, and has been billed as the new flagship centre for fine arts education in the GTA. Complementing the facilities of the Faculty of Fine Arts in the Joan & Martin Goldfarb Centre for Fine Arts, Burton Auditorium, the Centre for Film and Theatre, and the Technology-Enhanced Learning Building, Accolade brings all seven fine arts departments together in one dynamic cluster as the cultural hub of the campus.
Accolade East

Both the Department of Music and the Department of Dance have a new home with dedicated, state-of-the-art facilities in Accolade East. The celebrated Art Gallery of York University has also moved into Accolade East. Located east of the Centre for Film and Theatre, facing the Schulich School of Business, Accolade East features extensive exhibition and performing arts facilities, The Sandra Faire and Ivan Fecan Theatre, and The Recital Hall, including the main box office, as well as classrooms and an open-access, 24-hour computer lab serving the entire university.
The Recital Hall just after grand opening performance.

Accolade West

Located north of the Joan & Martin Goldfarb Centre for Fine Arts and adjacent to Burton Auditorium, Accolade West is used by students from across the university. A four-storey building dedicated primarily to academic studies, the building houses a full roster of 'smart' classrooms, seminar rooms and computer labs ranging in capacity from 40 to 400 seats, all featuring a full complement of cutting-edge technology, clear sightlines and accessible seating. The spacious main floor lobby, enhanced by a soaring atrium spanning the entire height of the building, offers a welcoming entrance into the Fine Arts complex. It houses the student-run gallery of the Department of Visual Arts as well as two new studios for the Fine Arts Cultural Studies program in the Faculty of Fine Arts.
Curtis Lecture Halls and the Ross Building

The Curtis Lecture Halls and Ross Building was once the entrance or main door of York University from the 1960s until the opening of Vari Hall in 1992.
Curtis Lecture Halls is a 3-4 floor complex of lecture halls of varying sizes built in 1971. Connected through a hallway, to the east of the halls is the Ross Building, containing offices of professors, faculty offices and the Senate. Curtis Lecture Halls was named for Air Vice-Marshal Wilfrid A. Curtis, founding organizing committee and first Chancellor of York (1959-1968).
The Ross building opened in 1966 is named for the late Dr. Murray G. Ross, founding president of York (1960-1970) and law professor at the University of Toronto. It was originally called Humanities and Social Sciences building .
Vari Hall

''Vari Hall''

Vari Hall is a building primarily containing lecture rooms. Built in 1992 by Raymond Moriyama, a $2 million donation and other cost were covered by George and Helen Vari, Hungarian refugees and businesspersons. The 3 storey rotunda of the hall has become a meeting place for students and, occasionally, protestors.
The building looks out towards the York Commons, a park at the university. Prior to the Hall's construction, a massive ramp provided access to the Ross Building from the Commons. York's crest adorns the outer face of the rotunda.
York Commons

York Commons is a park enclosed by the main buildings at York, including:

★ Vari Hall

★ York University Student Centre (for which the architect received a Governor General's award and the Award of Excellence from The Canadian Architect)

★ York Lanes - retail mall, book store and office space for teaching staff

★ Centre for Film and Theatre

★ Accolade East and Accolade West
A roadway circulating the park and the buildings serves solely for use by TTC, VIVA, YRT and GO buses. In the future, the commons will feature a subway stop from the new Spadina subway line extension. A shallow pool, often the temporary home to Canada Geese and ducks, and a fountain are also located in the tree-lined park.
Student Centre
York Lanes

York Lanes is a two storey mall at the Keele campus of York University in Toronto, Ontario.
The lower level has restaurants and retail stores including the York University Bookstore at the East end. Also housed in the mall is the Campus Cove (an arcade/LAN gaming centre/pool hall) and the on-campus medical office. Offices for faculty of various departments as well as various student groups are located on the second floor.
The layout of the mall is rectangular (long in the East-West direction). It is divided into three sections (arbitrarily based on the bends of the corridor, and not on any other difference between the sections or their contents). One main corridor runs along its length. Slightly diagonal towards the South-West corner at the start (the West Market), then East-West (The Main Wing), and finally turning south for a short span at the East end (the East Market). There is one branch off to a North exit where the West Market meets the Main Wing (where the corridor bends), and there is also a door to a narrow passageway at the West end (just adjacent to the bookstore and opposite the main East exit) to another back exit to the North.

Fraternities and Sororities


Prior to 1989, membership in a fraternity or sorority at York University was forbidden. In 1989, the related senate resolution was revoked and replaced with Presidential Regulation Number 5 which does not forbid membership but rather denies official status to fraternities and sororities at York University. The reasons given in this regulation are that fraternities and sororities deflect students from participation in the College system, that their commitment to exclusivity is in conflict with York's principles of inclusivity (no student club is allowed to deny membership except on the grounds of major, for those organisations with representation to their department), and are often associated with inappropriate conduct. Over the years, however, four fraternities and three sororities have operated, unofficially, on campus:
''Fraternities:''

Alpha Epsilon Pi (ΑΕΠ) - (Eta Pi Chapter - York University)

Phi Delta Theta (ΦΔΘ) - (Ontario Delta Chapter - York University)

Phi Kappa Pi (ΦΚΠ) - (Sigma Pi Chapter - York University)

Sigma Alpha Mu (ΣΑΜ) - (Gamma Omicron Chapter - York University)
''Sororities:''

Alpha Kappa Alpha (ΑΚΑ) - [3]

Delta Pi (ΔΠ) - (Local)

Sigma Delta Tau (ΣΔΤ) - Gamma Omicron Chapter (inactive)
Phi Delta Phi (ΦΔΦ) international legal fraternity, at Osgoode Law School, was given special dispensation when the law school became part of the university, as the fraternity's history with the law school dated back to 1896, and is recognized at York.

Students


York has more than 50,000 students enrolled. Most students come from the Greater Toronto Area, but there is a sizeable population of students from across Canada and abroad. To serve this large population, there are 225 student clubs and organisations; two student-run publications and three broadcast programs; six art galleries; 33 on-campus eateries; and a retail mall. Undergraduate students at York are represented by the York Federation of Students, a student-elected body that sponsors most of the clubs and engages in lobbying with the university administration and the provincial and federal governments. While the YFS is one of the largest student associations in Canada (by virtue of York's large undergraduate population), it has often come under fire for being too political rather than focusing on student specific issues.
Colleges

York has nine undergraduate residential colleges:

★ Atkinson 1961- named after The Toronto Star founding publisher Joseph E. Atkinson

★ Bethune 1970 - named after Dr. Norman Bethune

★ Calumet 1970 - a native nations word for "Peacepipe"

★ Founders 1965 - named after the founders of the university

Glendon 1966 - a combination of "glen", meaning "valley", and "Don" for the Don River.

★ McLaughlin 1968 - after Samuel McLaughlin, patron and manufacturer. (The affiliated residence, Tatham Hall, is named for a former Master of the College and Professor George Tatham. [4].)

★ Stong 1970 - named after the family on whose land is the main campus

★ Vanier 1965 - named after Governor General Georges Vanier

★ Winters 1968 - named after former federal cabinet Minister Robert Winters
--Also, for a bit of trivia, the different houses that make up Founders Residence are actually named after the Group of Seven (Varley House, Harris House, etc.), or as the plaque at the building says, 'The Founders of Canadian Art."
Faculties and abbreviations


★ Arts (AS)[5]

Atkinson Faculty of Liberal & Professional Studies (AK)[6]

★ Education (ED)

★ Environmental Studies (ES)[7]

Fine Arts (FA)[8]

Glendon College (GL)

★ Graduate Studies (GS)

★ Health (HH)[9]

Osgoode Hall Law School (OS)

Schulich School of Business (SB)

Science and Engineering (SC)[10]

York University & Sheridan College Bachelors of Design Honours (YSDN)[11]
Seneca@York

The Keele campus is host to a satellite facility of Seneca College, Seneca@York, and York University offers a number of joint programs with Seneca College:

★ School of Communication Arts

★ Computer Studies

★ Biological Science and Applied Chemistry

★ Corporate and Technical Communications

Transit


Main articles: York University (YRT), York University (GO Station), York University (TTC)

York University is a "commuter school". Over 85% of the students and 90% of the staff have home addresses in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), and most of them commute by car or transit. Of commuters, 85% approach from Keele Street and Steeles Avenue. (source: York Campus Master Plan, 1988, p. 13.)
Close to fourteen hundred buses move people through the campus each day; a proposed extension of the Yonge-University-Spadina subway line would help alleviate this problem. It would run directly under the campus, creating new stations at Keele and Finch (Finch West), at the centre of campus (York University), and at Steeles Avenue, interfacing with York Region Transit (Steeles West).
York University's Glendon and Keele campuses are served by the Toronto Transit Commission. The Keele site is also served by York Region Transit buses (both regular and Viva) from the immediate north, GO Transit express buses from several other Toronto suburbs and Greyhound buses for regional transportation. The department of Security, Parking and Transportation Services operates a shuttle service to GO Transit's York University train station on its Bradford corridor.

Security Services


'York University Security Service' provides security on the university's campuses. It is not clear if the unit are considered peace officers as they are not designated by the university as ''campus police''

Controversies


A tradition of activist politics on campus has resulted in vocal demonstrations, particularly concerning issues relating to the Middle East and economic globalization. There have been criticisms of both activist groups by the administration and media, for disrupting classes and provoking confrontations between students, and of the university administration for its response to demonstrators and activists, including expulsion and alleged police misconduct against activists.
As well, a controversy arose in 2005 regarding the sale of university land for a nearby townhouse development, and whether the developer, Tribute Communities, paid the full market price for the land. York University maintained that it was the best overall proposal. An independent investigation conducted by retired judge Edward Saunders verified that there had been no misconduct.
In October 2005, Professor David F. Noble, in opposition to York's practice of cancelling classes on the Jewish High Holidays, which originated in 1974 in deference to the university's large proportion of Jewish students and faculty members at that time, applied to the university's senate body for review of the policy. Upon the York senate's affirmation of the policy, he pledged that he would teach on those days anyway, but later decided to instead poll students in his courses, asking if they wished future classes to be cancelled out of respect for other religious holidays.
On March 31, 2006, in the case of Freeman-Maloy v. Marsden, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that the University, and its President Dr. Lorna Marsden could be sued by plaintiff Daniel Freeman-Maloy for "misfeasance in public office."[12]
Additional controversies are published in the official memoir of Murray Ross, the university's first president. (See 'References' section below.)

Presidents



Murray G. Ross 1959-1970

David Slater 1970-1973

H. Ian Macdonald 1973-1984

Harry W. Arthurs 1985-1992

Susan Mann 1993-1997

Lorna Marsden 1997 - 2007

Mamdouh Shoukri 2007 - present[2]

Chancellors



Wilfred A. Curtis, RCAF air marshal, 1959-1968

Floyd S. Chalmers, publisher, 1968-1973

Walter L. Gordon, federal cabinet minister, 1973-1977

John P. Robarts, premier of Ontario, 1977-1982

John S. Proctor, banker, 1982-1983

J. Tuzo Wilson, geophysicist, 1983-1986

Larry Clarke, founder of SPAR Aerospace, 1986-1991

Oscar Peterson, jazz piano great, 1991-1994

Arden Haynes, businessman, 1994-1998

Avie J. Bennett, businessman, 1998-2004

Peter deCarteret Cory, jurist, 2004-Present

Noted alumni


This list includes graduates of Osgoode Hall Law School prior to its affiliation with York University.
Politicians


John Black Aird - former Lieutenant Governor of Ontario

Maurizio Bevilacqua - former federal Minister and Secretary of State for Canada

Marion Boyd - former Attorney General of Ontario

Michael Bryant - Attorney-General of Ontario

David Collenette - former senior federal cabinet minister

George Drew - 14th Premier of Ontario

Bill Davis - 18th Premier of Ontario

Ernie Eves - 23rd Premier of Ontario

Gordon O'Connor - Minister of National Defence of Canada

Jim Flaherty - Minister of Finance of Canada

Herb Gray - former Deputy Prime Minister of Canada, former Solicitor General of Canada

Barbara Hall - former Mayor of Toronto, current Chief Commissioner of the Ontario Human Rights Commission

Charles Harnick - former Attorney General of Ontario

Ron Irwin - former Federal Cabinet Minister, former Ambassador to Ireland, current Consul to Boston

Jack Layton - Leader of the federal New Democratic Party

Floyd Laughren - former Ontario NDP MPP and finance minister

John Robarts - 17th Premier of Ontario

William Ross Macdonald - former Lieutenant Governor of Ontario

Roy McMurtry - former Attorney General of Ontario

Ian Scott - former Attorney General of Ontario

Greg Sorbara - Ontario Minister of Finance

★ Karen Sloan Kroft - former United Nations Ambassador of the environment

Robert Stanley Welch - former Deputy Premier of Ontario, Former Attorney General of Ontario

John Tory - Leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario

Michael Tziretas - Toronto city councillor

Peter Van Loan - President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs

David Young - former Attorney General of Ontario

John McNee - Canadian ambassador to United Nations
Judges


★ Colonel Kim Carter - Chief Military Judge, National Defence Canada

Peter Cory - former puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada and current Chancellor of the university

★ Frank Joseph Hughes - former puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada

Wilfred Judson - former puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada

Patrick Kerwin - former Chief Justice of Canada

Bora Laskin - former Chief Justice of Canada

John Robert Cartwright - former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada

Wishart Spence - former puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada

Roy McMurtry - Chief Justice of Ontario

Frederick E. Gibson - Federal Court judge

James O'Reilly - Federal Court judge

John D. Richard - Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal of Canada

Allen Linden - Federal Court of Appeal judge

Dennis O'Connor - of the Ontario Court of Appeal and Associate Chief Justice of Ontario
Business Leaders


Rob McEwen - President and CEO of US Gold Corporation

Ivan Fecan - President and Chief Executive Officer, CTV

Richard E. Waugh - President and Chief Executive Officer, Scotiabank

Ellis Jacob - President and CEO, Cineplex Entertainment

Moya Greene - President and Chief Executive Officer of Canada Post

Edward Samuel Rogers - business tycoon, President and CEO Rogers Communications

★ Michael Eisen - Chief Legal Officer, Microsoft Canada

Janice Fukausa - Chief Financial Officer, Royal Bank of Canada

Bernd Christmas - Board of Directors, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

★ Arthur R.A. Scace, QC - Board of Directors, Scotiabank

★ Kathleen Taylor - President, Worldwide Business Operations, Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts

Bill Hatanaka - Group Head Wealth Management & Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,TD Waterhouse, TD Bank Financial Group

Paul Tsaparis, President of Hewlett - Packard Canada

Roma Khanna - named to Canada's "Top 40 Under 40", VP Chum Television Toronto, MBA York (Schulich)

Colleen Johnston - Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, TD Bank Financial Group

Bharat Masrani - Vice Chair and Chief Risk Officer, TD Bank Financial Group

Dina Palozzi - Executive Vice-President, BMO Nesbitt Burns and Senior Vice-President & Chief Privacy Officer, BMO Financial Group

Larry Organ - Chief Executive Officer, ConsumerBase LLC, Founder of FastWeb and JobsOnline

★ Paul Alofs - President and CEO of Princess Margaret Hospital Foundation

Peter Currie - Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Nortel

Mark Guibert - Vice-President, Corporate Marketing, Research In Motion

Alex Shnaider - Chairman of Royal Laser Corp. and co-founder of Midland Group Midland Group, Canada's youngest billionaire

Jordan Banks - Managing Director of e-Bay Canada, named to Canada's Top 40 Under 40 (LL.B. Osgoode)

★ Lucianna Furtado - Vice-President, Controller International Operations, Citigroup Inc.

★ Phillip Gestrin - Executive Director, Global Equities, Lehman Brothers

★ Priscila David - Vice-President of Systems Engineering, Cisco Systems Canada

★ Linda Krieger - Vice-President, Compensation Design and Services, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce

★ Dennis Fotinos - President and CEO, Enwave Engergy Corporation

★ Rajan Ariyur - Director of Securitization, CIBC World Markets

Isabel Bassett - former MPP and Chief Executive Officer of TVOntario
Artists


Murat Akser - film director, cultural historian

Christian Bök - poet

Debra Brown - head choreographer for the Cirque de Soleil

Amnon Buchbinder - filmmaker

Rudy Buttignol - former Chair of the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television, founder of International Hot Docs film festival, former creative head of TVO

★ Joel Cohen - writer for The Simpsons

Michael Davey - sculptor and faculty member

★ deMarco DeCiccio - a vocalist with the contemporary Christian and Gay music duo Jason and deMarco .

Robert Duncan - composer

Mark Irwin - cinematographer (Me, Myself & Irene, Scream, There's Something About Mary)

Michael Sparaga - filmmaker

Kardinal Offishall - Canadian Musician

Ringo Lam - Hong Kong action director, inspired Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs

Orville Lloyd Douglas - poet/writer

★ Peter Lynch - filmmaker (Project Grizzly)

Rachel McAdams - actress (Mean Girls, The Wedding Crashers)

Steve McCaffery - poet

Paul P. - visual artist (homoerotic drawings inspired Hedi Slimane's Dior Homme ad campaign)

Steven Page - musician, lead singer for the Barenaked Ladies

Mark Penney - film director

k-os- musician

Nino Ricci - writer, Governor General's Award for Fiction

Spencer Rice - actor/director (Kenny vs. Spenny)

Peter Robinson - English-born Canadian-based detective novelist

Albert Schultz - actor

Sarah Slean - singer-songwriter

Ron Sparks - comedian/actor/writer, (Video on Trial)

Scott Thompson - comedian/actor, (The Kids in the Hall, The Larry Sanders Show, My Fabulous Gay Wedding)

Bruce LaBruce - Underground Filmmaker and icon of the gay arts community (JD's, Vinyl)
Scientists


Steve MacLean - astronaut

★ Gordon Shepherd - Director of York’s Centre for Research on Earth & Space Science(CRESS), known for exceptional contribution to the Canadian Space Program

Nigel Lockyer - Director of TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics located at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Lockyer who graduated from York University's physics department was formerly a Professor of Physics at the University of Pennsylvania.

★ Thomas Adams- Executive Director of Energy Probe
Athletes


Karen Cockburn - Olympic Medallist, trampoline (Silver in 2004, Bronze in 2000)

Mathieu Turgeon - Olympic Medallist, trampoline (Bronze in 2000)

Richard Van Huizen - Olympic volleyball player

Trish Stratus - Former professional wrestler

Jeff Johnson - Professional Football Player (Currently playing for the CFL's Toronto Argonauts)

Carlos Newton - Mixed Martial Artist
Broadcasters


Barbara Budd - award-winning senior journalist with the CBC

Nancy Durham - journalist and foreign correspondent for the CBC, married to Oxford philosopher Bill Newton-Smith

Ken Daniels - former Hockey Night in Canada host, current Detroit Red Wings commentator on FSN Detroit

Melissa DiMarco - tv personality and actress. has her own show and a role on Degrassi

Brian Milner - senior columnist for the Globe and Mail

Jian Ghomeshi - CBC host, musician, writer and producer

Hazel Mae, news anchor and personality on NESN in Boston, Massachusetts.

Beatrice Politi - political specialist on CP24 in Ottawa

Sandie Rinaldo - award-winning CTV news anchor for all of Canada

Mike Sheerin - Gemini nominated documentary producer and director, Secret Mulroney Tapes

Paula Todd - award-winning journalist and host of TVOntario's ''Person to Person'' and CTV's The Verdict

Chantal Hebert - award-winning journalist for The Toronto Star as well as Le Devoir and National Post among others, and commentator on Canadian politics, appears often on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

Michael Jenkinson - feature film executive for Telefilm Canada, former Hollywood producer

★ Jacintha Wesselingh - reporter for CTV News Toronto

Michael Hirsh and Patrick Loubert - founders of Nelvana international animation company based in Toronto (Babar, Hergé's Adventures of Tintin, Bob and Margaret)
Other


Mark Bluvshtein, chess grandmaster

★ Anne Cavoukian - Privacy Commissioner of Ontario (undergrad at York)

Felix Chee - President, University of Toronto Asset Management Corporation

Marlys Edwardh - renowned Canadian lawyer who worked on Maher Arar committee

Ward P.D. Elcock - former Director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service

Melyssa Ford - Model and BET personality.

Gord Ash - Former Toronto Blue Jays General Manager (1995-2001) and current Milwaukee Brewers assistant to the General Manager.

Cecil Foster - novelist, essayist, sociologist

Edward Greenspan - renowned Canadian criminal defense lawyer (clients include Conrad Black among others)

Edmund Ho - Chief Executive of Macau

Clayton Ruby - renowned Canadian lawyer (partner's with M. Edwardh above)

Richard Leblanc - named to Canada's "Top 40 Under 40"[13], York University Professor

★ Natasha Ramsahai - chief meteorologist for CBC Canada

Sheldon Levy - President & Vice-Chancellor of Ryerson University

Susan McGrath - past President of the Canadian Bar Association

B.W. Powe - novelist, poet, essayist, columnist

David Rocco - celebrity chef [14]

Tom Traves - President & Vice-Chancellor of Dalhousie University

Victoria Pratt - Actress, Fitness Model, Fitness Writer

Dianne Martin - renowned Canadian lawyer and later professor at Osgoode Hall Law School

Gavin MacKenzie - Treasurer (the head) of the Law Society of Upper Canada

Zain Verjee - CNN writer and producer, anchor of Situation Room on CNN

Lorne Waldman - renowned Canadian immigration lawyer

Alan Young - renowned Canadian constitutional lawyer and civil rights activist

Kaley Roosen - 200,000th York University graduate in Bachelor of Science (13 June 2007)

Noted faculty



Irving Abella, history

Louise Arbour, professor of Law, currently UN High Commissioner for Human Rights

Christopher Armstrong (professor), history

Harry Arthurs, law and former President of York University

Paul Axelrod, education

Joel Bakan, law, author of The Corporation

Heather Monroe-Blum, currently the Principal and Vice-Chancellor of McGill University

Hédi Bouraoui, French and English literature

Rob Bowman, ethnomusicology

Castelo Branco, Professor of Theology

Ed Broadbent (1960s) - former leader of the federal New Democratic Party

Jean-Gabriel Castel - Professor Emeritus of Law

Jerome Ch'en - Professor Emeritus of History

Lorraine Code - Professor of Philosophy

G. Ramsay Cook - Professor Emeritus of History

Robert W. Cox - political scientist, founder of Neo-Gramscianism

Andrea Davis - Professor of Humanities, Latin American Caribbean Studies, History, English

Christopher Dewdney - author, Professor of English Literature

Bernie Frolic - Professor, Chinese Studies, noted China Theorist

Stephen Gill - Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science, theorist of International Political Economy

R. Darren Gobert - Professor of Drama in the Department of English.

Barbara Godard - Professor of English and the Avie Bennett Historica Chair in Canadian Literature.

Jack Granatstein - Professor Emeritus of History

Leslie Green, Professor, Law, Philosophy, and Social and Political Thought, also holds permanent Chair in Jurisprudence at the University of Oxford

Christopher D. Green, Professor of Psychology and Philosophy, President-elect of the Society for the History of Psychology (APA Division 26)

John Greyson - film director

Stephen Hellman - author, Professor of European Politics

Phil Hoffman - independent experimental filmmaker

Peter Hogg - Professor Emeritus of Law , constitutional expert, former Dean of Osgoode

Michiel Horn - Professor Emeritus of History, University Historian

Ian P. Howard - Founder of the Centre for Vision Research, Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Biology

Carl E. James - Professor, Faculty of Education

John Katz - professor of film, film ethicist, organizer of Toronto Jewish Film Festival

Ali Kazimi - filmmaker

Gabriel Kolko - Professor Emeritus of History

Paul Laurendeau - Professor, Department of French Studies, linguist and language philosopher

James Laxer - author, columnist and commentator, Professor of Canadian Politics

Jack Layton - leader of the New Democratic Party

Lee Lorch - Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, civil rights activist

Bernard Luk - Professor of History and Vice-President of Hong Kong Institute of Education

Edelgard Mahant, political science

Tom McElroy - Senior Research Scientist and Head of Space Research Section at Environment Canada, also professor of Physics & Astronomy at York University, winner of several science awards and developer of atmospheric instruments used by NASA

Kenneth McRoberts - Professor of Political Science and current Principal of Glendon College

Patrick J. Monahan - Professor of Law

H. Vivian Nelles - Professor Emeritus of History

Jonathan Nitzan - Professor of Political Economy

David F. Noble - Historian of Technology

Michael Ondaatje - author and filmmaker, Professor of English Literature

Ferdinand Ouellet - Professor Emeritus of History

John O'Neill - Distinguished Research Professor, Sociology

Michael D. Ornstein - Professor of Sociology

Leo Panitch - Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science, editor of the Socialist Register

Andreas Papandreou - Greek Prime Minister, Economics Professor (1969-1974)

Sergei M. Plekhanov - Professor of Political Science, member of Soviet Academy of Sciences

B. W. Powe - Professor of English

Fahim Quadir - Professor of International Development Studies

Anthony Richmond - Professor Emeritus of Sociology

John Ridpath - Objectivist philosopher and retired Associate Professor of Economics and Intellectual History

Paul Roazen - Professor Emeritus of Social and Political Science, founder of meta-psychotherapy

L. S. Rosen - Professor Emeritus of Accounting, one of Canada's leading forensic accountants

J.T. Saywell - Professor Emeritus of History

★ Paul Stevens - Professor of History

Orest Subtelny Professor of History

John K. Tsotsos - Director, Centre for Vision Research, Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, Canada Research Chair in Computational Vision

Livio (Livy) Visano - Associate Professor of Sociology

Ellen Wood - historian and critic of political theory

Neal Wood - historian

Robin Wood - Professor Emeritus of Film and Video, famous film critic

★ Alan Young - Professor of Law (LL.B. Osgoode, LL.M. Harvard)

Edward Hagerman - Military Historian

External links



York University

York Federation of Students

York University Development Corporation (YUDC)

Existere - Journal of Arts and Literature

York University Mature Students Organization

References


1. http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/financialpost/story.html?id=92cb135f-b6b5-4697-b5dd-a98c7cca77b6&k=13850
2. Y-File: McMaster's Mamdouh Shoukri chosen as next president of York

Ross, Murray. "The Way Must be Tried: Memoirs of A University Man." Toronto: Stoddart Publishing Company, 1992.
York University. "York Campus Master Plan." IBI BIA Group, 1998.
UPACE. "Master Plan for the York University Campus." Toronto: Howarth and Smith Monotype Limited, 1963.
''Also known as 'Report on the Master Plan for the York University Campus.'''

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