Winter 2023
Download pdf(8.42MB)We Want Your Class Notes
Marking career and personal achievements, special milestones and the birth of future ֱ alumni - Class Notes helps you stay in touch with former classmates, housemates, and faculty.
Those Who Have Passed
Sharing memories of friends, faculty, and colleagues - In Memoriam helps you honour those who have recently passed.
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The Gertrudes
Just to Please You
One evening in 2008, a collection of Queen’s students, faculty, and staff got together at the Grad Club to play music and sing. Today they still play together as The Gertrudes, a Kingston-based “folkestra” that describes itself as “an old-time saloon party travelling through deep space.” They’ve been joined onstage by more than 100 local musicians over the years, and they’ve performed alongside the likes of Ricky Skaggs and Sarah Harmer. Their fifth studio album, Just to Please You, was released in August.
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Stalin’s Gamble
Michael Jabara Carley, MA’70, PhD’76
Université de Montréal history professor Michael Jabara Carley, MA’70, PhD’76, draws on archival evidence from the U.S., the U.K., France, and Russia to unearth new evidence of Joseph Stalin’s behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts in the years leading up to the Second World War. In Stalin’s Gamble, released this summer by the University of Toronto Press, he shows how Stalin tried – and ultimately failed – to build a defensive alliance against Hitler.
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Four Bullets, Four Witnesses, Four Liars
Brian Barrie, Law’76
In 1988, Jimmy Strutton was shot four times in a secluded log cabin on the outskirts of Owen Sound, Ont. Each of the four witnesses at the scene told police a different story, and one of them, Mae McEachern, was charged with murder. McEachern’s defence lawyer, Brian Barrie, Law’76, relies on his own memories, as well as trial transcripts and newspaper articles, to bring the crime and the trial to life in Four Bullets, Four Witnesses, Four Liars, now available from Delve Books.
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Boosters and Barkers: Financing Canada’s Involvement in the First World War
David Roberts, Artsci’73, MA’75
Most Canadians at the time may not have fought in the First World War, but many of them had a hand in financing it. David Roberts, Artsci’73, MA’75, explores the surprising popularity of war bonds and how the federal government used them to convince Canadians to fund Canada’s military commitment in Boosters and Barkers: Financing Canada’s Involvement in the First World War. It tells the story of six bond drives that together raised almost one-third of the country’s total war costs. Read it now from University of British Columbia Press.
We Want Your Class Notes
Marking career and personal achievements, special milestones and the birth of future ֱ alumni - Class Notes helps you stay in touch with former classmates, housemates, and faculty.
Those Who Have Passed
Sharing memories of friends, faculty, and colleagues - In Memoriam helps you honour those who have recently passed.