Toronto, Ontario/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 10:12, 17 January 2024
- See also changes related to Toronto, Ontario, or pages that link to Toronto, Ontario or to this page or whose text contains "Toronto, Ontario".
Parent topics
- Ontario: A province in eastern Canada, the second largest in area and with approximately 12,000,000 people (2006 census) the most populous. [e]
Sports
- Toronto Blue Jays: a MLB team in the American League East division, located in Toronto, Ontario. [e]
Press
- National Post: A Toronto, Ontario-based Canadian newspaper [e]
Education
- University of Toronto: Institution of higher education based in Toronto, established by Royal Charter in 1827 with 70,143 students (62,097 full-time), 11,807 faculty and staff and 422,000 alumni. [e]
- Upper Canada College: Add brief definition or description
Places
- Cherry Marsh (Toronto): Add brief definition or description
- Cherry Street (Toronto): a north-south main roadway in the eastern downtown of Toronto, Ontario, running through a former industrial area that is being redeveloped [e]
- Etobicoke-Lakeshore: Part of the Toronto, Ontario metropolitan area, and the riding of Liberal Party (Canada) leader Michael Ignatieff [e]
- Lake Ontario: The eastern-most of the five North American Great Lakes [e]
- Moss Park (Toronto): A park in downtown Toronto, and the neighbourhood that surrounds it, long considered one of the least desirable, by real estate developers. [e]
- Queen Street (Toronto): One of the most prominent streets in York, Upper Canada [e]
Structures
- CN Tower: A 553.33 metre (1,815 ft., 5 inch) broadcast and telecommunications tower in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [e]
- Broadway Theatre (Toronto): A theatre formerly located on the southwest corner of Bay and Queen streets, in Toronto, Ontario. [e]
- Casino Theatre (Toronto): A burlesque theatre and movie theatre, designed by Kaplan & Sprachman, built in 1936, since demolished [e]
- Empress Hotel (Toronto): Heritage building, built on Toronto's Yonge Street, in 1888, that was torched on January 3, 2011 [e]
- Regent Theatre (Toronto): Theatre in Toronto, that operated as a cinema called the Belsize, from 1927 to 1950, a live theatre venue known as the Crest, from 1950 to 1968, and as a cinema again, called the Regent, from 1968 [e]
- Union Building (Toronto): Heritage building in Toronto, built in 1908, part of the original campus of Upper Canada College [e]
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Toronto. Needs checking by a human.
- Albert Kotin: (1907-1980) An early member of the New York School of Abstract Expressionist Artists. New York School Abstract Expressionism— represented by Jackson Pollock, Willem De Kooning, Franz Kline, and others— became the leading art movement of the postwar area. [e]
- Canadian Football League: A major, professional Canadian sports league founded in 1958 whose rules are roughly similar to, but differ in some respects from (American) football rules. [e]
- Daniel David Palmer: The founder of chiropractic, who famously said, "I have received chiropractic from the other world, similar as did Mrs. Eddy [with Christian Science healing]."[1] [e]
- Deep lake water cooling: A technique for harnessing the cool water reservoir at the bottom of deep lakes. [e]
- French in Canada: The linguistic heritage resulting from French colonization of parts of Canada. [e]
- Grand Trunk Railway: A Canadian railway system based primarily in Ontario and Quebec, with operations over much of Canada and neighboring parts of the United States, that subsequently became the basis for Canadian National Railways. [e]
- History of television technology: Chronology of the development and history of television. [e]
- John Roberts (journalist): Add brief definition or description
- Lake Express: A fast ferry on Lake Michigan. [e]
- Laura Bertram: Canadian actress best known for her TV roles in Ready or Not (1993-1997) and Andromeda (2000-2005). [e]
- Portuguese language: An Iberian Romance language, of the Indo-European family. [e]
- Ramble On: 1969 rock song recorded by Led Zeppelin for their 1969 album Led Zeppelin II. [e]
- Rochester, New York: An economically challenged city in upstate New York, located on the south shore of Lake Ontario [e]
- Russian language: Widely-used member of the Slavic languages, written in the Cyrillic alphabet and spoken across Eurasia. [e]
- Social Credit: A populist political movement strongest in Alberta and British Columbia, 1930s-1970s, and was based on the economic theories of British engineer Major C. H. Douglas. [e]
- The Rolling Stones: Famous and influential English blues rock group formed in 1962, known for their albums Let It Bleed and Sticky Fingers, and songs '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' and 'Start Me Up'. [e]
- U.S. intelligence and global health: Add brief definition or description
- Vancouver: City in Canada located on the Pacific coast, in the province of British Columbia; Population 611,869. [e]