缅北强奸

Professor Lynd Forguson's family honours his memory with a Boundless Promise scholarship. (Portrait of Lynd Forguson by Phil Richards. Gift of the artist to UTAC, 2002)

Lynd Forguson honoured with first Boundless Promise Scholarship

Lynd Forguson loved University College, its intimacy, its diversity, its wonderful way of helping young people.

Forguson served as Registrar, Vice-Principal and then Principal of UC from 1989 until 1997. He retired in 2003 and passed away at his home in Vancouver in 2005.

Now his family is honouring his memory by creating a scholarship in his name for students of University College. It will be directed toward students pursuing the discipline that meant so much to him, philosophy.

鈥淭his is not only to celebrate my husband鈥檚 life of intellectual exploration, but to promote student interest in critical thinking,鈥 says Georgiana Forguson. 鈥淎t a time when much of the undergraduate experience is focused on preparation for the economic marketplace, I think it is vital to acknowledge the need for a strong liberal arts foundation that will enable graduates to make decisions based on reasoned analysis of the issues, and not on ideological grounds.鈥

The gift was the first to be made under the University of Toronto鈥檚 new , which matches donations of $25,000 or more made to needs-based scholarships, between now and December 2015.

When a donor makes such a gift, the benefaction is invested in the 缅北强奸鈥檚 endowment, which in turn generates a permanent annual payout for the student award. The University matches the payout 1:1, thus doubling the impact of the donation. These matching funds go above and beyond what the university already commits to student financial aid annually.

Making the first gift to the new Boundless Promise program 鈥渋s a real honour,鈥 says Geoff Forguson, Lynd鈥檚 son. 鈥淢y dad would have been proud to know that.鈥

Donald Ainslie, Principal of University College, wrote to Georgiana Forguson thanking her for establishing the award in honour of her husband. 鈥淚 see his portrait every day when I leave my office, and it serves as a reminder of the ideals I am trying to pursue during my time as principal.

鈥淲ith UC as the founding college of the University, it seems particularly appropriate that the first award to take advantage of the recently launched Boundless Promise matching opportunity honours one of the College鈥檚 best principals,鈥 Ainslie said. 鈥淭he program鈥檚 name, moreover, truly captures Lynd鈥檚 optimism in investing so much of his time and energy in supporting students.鈥

Georgiana Forguson says all of her husband鈥檚 undergraduate and graduate education 鈥渨as generously supported by various scholarships.鈥 Lynd and Georgiana met at school in Ohio. He became a Fulbright Scholar at Oxford and she received her teaching degree at the University of Toronto鈥檚 faculty of education in 1975.

鈥淏ecause he loved the career that these various funding groups enabled him to follow, it is appropriate that we return a small part of this generosity by establishing a scholarship in his name,鈥 Georgiana says.

Since Georgiana made the gift, a number of other donors have established scholarships under the Boundless Promise program鈥攅ach for their own reasons. For Georgiana, the rationale for her gift was simple: 鈥淭he scholarship will honour my husband鈥檚 love of University College and the University of Toronto. It was the centre of his intellectual and collegial universe for 35 years.鈥

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