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Complete Notes - University of Toronto Press Publishing

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201 CHAPTER 26 – 1926 – DEPRESSING TIMES<br />

59. Page 323, para. 3 – “to recover from the depression”: Saywell, Hepburn at 144-145.<br />

60. Page 323, para. 3 – “remained constant”: Stewart, “The Role <strong>of</strong> the Provincial Government” at 559-560.<br />

61. Page 324, para. 1 – “tuition fees had to rise”: Cody to Chancellor E.W. Wallace <strong>of</strong> Victoria, April 16, 1935, UTA/<br />

A68-0006/018(02).<br />

62. Page 324, para. 1 – “from $75 to $130 that year”: Masters, Cody at 191; Harris, “The Depression” at 11 says fees<br />

went from $75 to $100 in 1932, and from $100 to $125 in 1935.<br />

63. Page 324, para. 1 – “to drop out <strong>of</strong> university”: Paul Axelrod, Making a Middle Class: Student Life in English<br />

Canada during the Thirties (Kingston: McGill-Queen’s <strong>University</strong> <strong>Press</strong>, 1990) at 27.<br />

64. Page 324, para. 1 – “as had administrative expenses”: Masters, Cody at 191; Harris, “The Depression” at 10.<br />

65. Page 324, para. 1 – “now had secretaries”: Ibid. at 212.<br />

66. Page 324, para. 1 – “with the registrar’s <strong>of</strong>fice”: Ibid.<br />

67. Page 324, para. 1 – “throughout Cody’s presidency”: Harris, “The Depression” at 11.<br />

68. Page 324, para. 1 – “such as the Students’ Administrative Council”: Ibid. at 12. For S.A.C. and its benevolent<br />

activities during the 1930s, see Charles Levi, “The S.A.C. Historical Project 1930-1950” (<strong>Toronto</strong>: Self-published,<br />

1992) at 13-16.<br />

69. Page 324, para. 1 – “from modest middle class … families”: Paul Axelrod, Making a Middle Class at 24.<br />

70. Page 324, para. 1 – “by the Ontario Court <strong>of</strong> Appeal in 1990”: Canada Trust Co. v. Ontario Human Rights<br />

Commission (1990), 69 D.L.R. (4 th ) 321 (Ont. C.A.); Ziff, Unforeseen Legacies at 53, 132 and 135.<br />

71. Page 324, para. 1 – “who graduated in 1935”: “Sydney Morris Hermant”, Canadian Who’s Who, 1991 at 456.<br />

72. Page 324, para. 1 – “maintain first class honours”: Masters, Cody at 213.<br />

73. Page 324, para. 1 – “the future dean <strong>of</strong> the graduate school”: “Board appoints A.E. Safarian Dean <strong>of</strong> School <strong>of</strong><br />

Graduate Studies”, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Toronto</strong> Bulletin, October 29, 1970.<br />

74. Page 324, para. 1 – “would not have attended university”: Edward Safarian to author, November 20, 1997.<br />

75. Page 324, para. 1 – “the number <strong>of</strong> Jews at the <strong>University</strong>”: Paul Bator, “Memorandum on the Cody Papers”,<br />

UTA/A83-0036/001 at 10.<br />

76. Page 324, para. 1 – “he added”: Cody to General C.F. Winter, February 8, 1934, quoted in Bator, “Memorandum”<br />

at 9. Charles Francis Winter was born in 1863 and from the age <strong>of</strong> 18 served with the British Army in<br />

various colonial campaigns, including the Red River expedition <strong>of</strong> 1885. He joined the Canadian army in 1896<br />

and served with the Royal Canadian Regiment during the Boer War: see “Major Charles Francis Winter” in<br />

Morgan, ed., The Canadian Men and Women <strong>of</strong> the Time at 1176. Winter had no connection with the <strong>University</strong>,<br />

and in his original letter to Cody expressed the hope that he would not be “considered a busybody in butting in<br />

on what may be considered none <strong>of</strong> my business”: see Winter to Cody, February 7, 1934, UTA/A68-0006/12.<br />

77. Page 324, para. 2 – “during the 1930s”: McKillop, Matters <strong>of</strong> Mind at 425-427.<br />

78. Page 324, para. 2 – “the highest it had ever been”: Harris, “The Depression” at 1.

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