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''"My purpose in establishing the Killam Trusts is to help in the building of Canada's future by encouraging advanced study. Thereby I hope, in some measure, to increase the scientific and scholastic attainments of Canadians, to develop and expand the work of Canadian universities, and to promote sympathetic understanding between Canadians and the peoples of other countries."''
''"My purpose in establishing the Killam Trusts is to help in the building of Canada's future by encouraging advanced study. Thereby I hope, in some measure, to increase the scientific and scholastic attainments of Canadians, to develop and expand the work of Canadian universities, and to promote sympathetic understanding between Canadians and the peoples of other countries."''
For further information regarding the Killam Trusts, please visit [http://www.killamtrusts.ca].
For further information regarding the Killam Trusts, please visit [[http://www.killamtrusts.ca The Killam Trusts]].

Revision as of 13:44, 1 June 2006

THE KILLAM TRUSTS Established in 1965, the Killam Trusts comprise some $400 million (Cdn), largely for scholarships at the graduate and postgraduate levels. Funding for the Killam Trusts came from Izaak Walton Killam, a legendary 20th Century Canadian business figure, and his vivacious wife Dorothy J. Killam.

The Killam benefactions went to five Canadian universities: University of British Columbia, University of Calgary, University of Alberta, Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University and Dalhousie University. The Canada Council for the Arts also received Killam funds. The Council's Killam Research Fellowships are open to professors from all Canadian universities. The Council’s $100,000 Killam Prizes in Health Sciences, Natural Sciences, Engineering, Social Sciences and Humanities, recognize lifetime contributions and are among Canada's most prestigious awards in these fields.

In the words of Mrs. Killam's Will:

"My purpose in establishing the Killam Trusts is to help in the building of Canada's future by encouraging advanced study. Thereby I hope, in some measure, to increase the scientific and scholastic attainments of Canadians, to develop and expand the work of Canadian universities, and to promote sympathetic understanding between Canadians and the peoples of other countries." For further information regarding the Killam Trusts, please visit [The Killam Trusts].