Four years at Ryerson University is coming to an end for many students this year. Karolina Weglarz hit campus to find out what these past four years have taught the graduating class of 2012.
Illan Mester was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, one of the most stereotyped countries in the world. Growing up in Canada he often had to debunk those stereotypes to his friends.
Want to help keep the High Park Zoo open? So does Michael Hiscock. Read his piece about saving the zoo here.
Ever feel like attending a university job fair has been a great waste of time? Brad MacInnis tells you why you're better off finding your own jobs after graduation.
Parents need to finally take responsibility for their child bully. Katia Dmitrieva shares her opinion on how proper parenting can do more than schools can when dealing with bullies.
Bringing you the top three quotes making headlines each week.
The 2012 Juno Awards proved to be a major disappointment for many reasons. Michael Hiscock tackles what went wrong and right with the Junos this year with Arts and Life editor Melody Lau and Opinions editor Brad McInnis.
Nadia Hussein has other plans after graduation. Instead of taking a year to breathe she plans to go back to school, dive into internships, and travel - but only if it furthers her professional development.
The students of Quebec have it pretty easy when it comes to tuition fees, even with the 75 per cent increase they will still hold the lowest tuition rates in Canada. Do you think Montreal students should keep fighting, or should they just pay up?
Diabetes is "the piss," but that hasn't stopped Kayla Soriano from being positive about it. She even plans on opening up a specialty bakery one day.
Arti Patel takes aim at the derogatory atmosphere surrounding Toronto's SlutWalk.
Canadian politicians: Are they leaders or primates? Matthew Bellissimo says it's hard to tell the difference.
Robert Frankel discusses his war against Ryerson's toilet paper.
I followed the movements of the elderly woman beside me. I bowed my head, knelt to the ground, then stood again and clasped my hands together. I didn't know if I was doing it right, but I was doing it. I was praying.
I’m used to getting confused looks from people when I’m out with my parents. It’s not every day that you see an African-Canadian child with two white parents.
In the 2010 municipal election, only 50.55 per cent of Torontonians voted, with many ridings unable to crack the 50 per cent barrier. In the most recent federal election, 61.4 per cent of Canadians voted after a historically low turnout in 2008 (58.8 per cent). Vote! VIDEO content inside.
Hundreds of Catholic and evangelical parents led by anti-gay religious leaders gathered in Queen's Park on Thursday to protest Bill 13. Jessica Galang shares her opinion on the debate.
Can the mayor shed the pounds? Matthew Wright thinks not.
Some people just don't like coffee.