2004 64 27 24 Forward Jacob Shaffelburg (HG) Canada 1993 59 Picton In 2008 OCAD president Sara Diamond changed the pedagogy She emphasised academics over studio time and required full-time instructors to hold an advanced degree There was some controversy as two faculty members resigned over the changes in 2010 Tom Traves then president of Dalhousie University in Halifax conducted a confidential review of how OCAD was managed He found that the number of senior faculty and administrators was excessive Diamond adopted most of his 30 recommendations including increased Decanal autonomy Name changes. Mexico Santos Laguna, 1.1 Winter and snowfall New York United States, An Indenture (a revision) of the deal was made on August 1 1805 Both the 1787 Purchase and its 1805 Indenture were registered as Crown Treaty No 13 for this revision the Mississaugas were given the amount of ten shillings equivalent to about $27 in 2010 dollars the Mississaugas of New Credit First Nation also claimed the Toronto Islands which was not part of the purchase as the agreement only went to the Lake Ontario shoreline The land sold consists of:. . 9.4 Air travel Toronto is Canada's largest media market and has four conventional dailies two alt-weeklies and three free commuter papers in a greater metropolitan area of about 6 million inhabitants the Toronto Star and the Toronto Sun are the prominent daily city newspapers while national dailies the Globe and Mail and the National Post are also headquartered in the city the Toronto Star the Globe and Mail and National Post are broadsheet newspapers StarMetro is distributed as free commuter newspapers Several magazines and local newspapers cover Toronto including Now and Toronto Life while numerous magazines are produced in Toronto such as Canadian Business Chatelaine Flare and Maclean's Daily Hive Western Canada's largest online-only publication opened their Toronto office in 2016. Toronto contains the headquarters of the major English-language Canadian television networks CBC CTV Citytv Global the Sports Network (TSN) and Sportsnet Much (formerly MuchMusic) M3 (formerly MuchMore) and MTV Canada are the main music television channels based in the city though they no longer primarily show music videos as a result of channel drift Tourism. .
The Distillery District holds the largest collection of Victorian industrial architecture in North America The city of Toronto originally formed as a result of its good harbour and the port was the source of the city's prosperity for most of its early history the oldest parts of the city are thus by the harbour with newer growth spreading out in all directions possible Around the harbour grew up a belt of industrial structures especially just east and west of downtown These included massive facilities such as Gooderham and Worts whiskey distillery and Massey Ferguson's farm equipment factories in the later half of the nineteenth century the railways became Toronto's main connection with the outside world and further industrial areas grew up around the freight lines in areas such as Weston and East York In the 1970s deindustrialization began to have a dramatic effect on Toronto By the 1990s almost all of the older factories by the waterfront were gone Some of the newer facilities further north still remain but are constantly disappearing Many of the more historic industrial buildings have been converted into lofts and offices Most have been demolished and in their place dozens of condominium towers have been erected by the lake shore There are also still large stretches of abandoned industrial land in the Port Lands district and other parts of Toronto awaiting a redevelopment plan Residential architecture, 54 5-2, International student 9.3% 22.3% 12 External links The Golden Horseshoe has been recognised as a geographic region since the 1950s but it was only on July 13 2004 that a report from the provincial Ministry of Public Infrastructure Renewal entitled Places to Grow coined the term Greater Golden Horseshoe extending the boundaries west to Waterloo Region north to Barrie/Simcoe County and northeast to the county and city of Peterborough a subsequent edition released February 16 2005 broadened the term further adding Brant Haldimand and Northumberland Counties to the now quasi-administrative region the Greater Golden Horseshoe region is officially designated in Ontario Regulation 416/05 under the Places to Grow Act the designation Greater Golden Horseshoe has legal significance with respect to taxation: in April 2017 the Government of Ontario announced plans to impose a 15 per cent Non-Resident Speculation Tax (NRST) on non-Canadian citizens non-permanent residents and non-Canadian corporations (with exceptions or rebates for refugees qualifying students and certain people working in Ontario) buying residential properties containing one to six units in the Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) The provincial transit authority Metrolinx makes use of the term Greater Golden Horseshoe the Metrolinx definition is consistent with the original 2004 Places to Grow definition However the city and county of Peterborough is not included Demographics. . 9 Transportation National MLS Golden Boot Main article: Sports in Toronto 6 Czech Republic Prague Czech Republic 4.1.1 Immigration A large number of residents from New Brunswick are employed in the primary sector of industry More than 13,000 New Brunswickers work in agriculture shipping products worth over $1 billion half of which is from crops and half of that from potatoes mostly in the Saint John River valley McCain Foods is one of the world's largest manufacturers of frozen potato products Other products include apples cranberries and maple syrup. New Brunswick was in 2015 the biggest producer of wild blueberries in Canada the value of the livestock sector is about a quarter of a billion dollars nearly half of which is dairy Other sectors include poultry fur and goats sheep and pigs A paper mill in Saint John About 83% of New Brunswick is forested Historically important it accounted for more than 80% of exports in the mid 1800s By the end of the 1800s the industry and shipbuilding were declining due to external economic factors the 1920s saw the development of a pulp and paper industry in the mid-1960s forestry practices changed from the controlled harvests of a commodity to the cultivation of the forests the industry employs nearly 12,000 generating revenues around $437 million Mining was historically unimportant in the province but since the 1950s has grown and in 2012 was an estimated $1.1 billion Mines in New Brunswick produce lead zinc copper and potash Education; ; .
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