I read the most recent issue of the Alumni Review from cover to cover. It was superb â best I can recall. I especially loved the articles about David Card, Omar El Akkad and 1 Aberdeen St. in âIf these Walls Could Talk.â Congratulations to the QAR team for their great work.
Jeremy Mosher, Artsciâ08, President, Queenâs University Alumni Association, 2018â2020
I enjoyed Principal Deaneâs article, âHeart of the Challenge,â both because as a public educator at Algonquin College for 35 years I espoused the same philosophy about post-secondary education and as a Queenâs alumnus I am proud to be associated with a university that has leadership that is still standing up to the corporate mindset that has overcome the majority of North American post-secondary institutions. Thank you.
Wayne Wilson, Edâ70
I was recently flipping through the Fall 2021 issue of the Alumni Review and spotted a couple familiar faces. The âEighty Years of Queenâs Nursingâ story featured a photo of the first capping ceremony in 1948. The student bent over to receive her cap is my grandmother, Evelyn Freeman. The woman next to her, farthest right in the picture, is her friend Freda Leadbeater. My grandmother and Freda met in Queenâs Nursing and they became lifelong friends. They were each otherâs maids of honour and remained in close contact for the rest of their lives. It was a nice surprise to see them in the Alumni Review, and I thought you might enjoy learning the sweet backstory of the students in the photo. Iâve attached a photo of the two of them at my grandmotherâs graduation. My Grandmaâs in her graduation gown and Fredaâs in a polka-dot dress (she was always very stylish).
Anne Runciman, Artsciâ20
Principal Patrick Deane excoriates those students who view their tuition as âsimply a fee for service,â and themselves as consumers of a âproductâ (Winter 2021). However, a lacuna is that universities as a subset of our entrepreneurial culture are as much to blame. In any case, the âmarketplace of ideasâ lexicon is old, and more semantic than substantive. A career soldier, I first came to Queenâs in the early 1960s as a âmature studentâ in night classes and summer school. I sacrificed my family to hours and months of study, and I was awed by my professors as demiurges of learning. When I left the army and enrolled full time in Honours English, my wife, Kathleen raised our girls and worked as a secretary to support us on meagre wages. One day, when a professor younger than I began our seminar with a question, the students were unresponsive, and I feared being overly assertive. Silence followed. âIf you havenât read the work, youâre wasting my time.â He stalked out of the room. Minutes later I was at his office: âMy family sacrifices everything for me to be here,â I said, âand I pay you, sir, to deliver the goods.â So, we had a one-on-one tutoring session. Years later when I read for the DPhil at the University of York (U.K.), British universities conducted a so-called âindustrial actionâ â professors withdrawing their services from their seminar âworkshops.â In due course I, too, became a purveyor of a literary âproductâ at Royal Roads Military College, and our officer cadet âcustomersâ at the end of classes evaluated the production process. My favourite comment: âI wish he would buy a pipe that would stay lit.â That would have been cost-effective.
G.W. Stephen Brodsky, Artsâ69, MA Victoriaâ75, DPhil York (U.K.)â89
I wanted to send a note to say how much I enjoyed the most recent issue of the Alumni Review... the diversity of the articles and the very attractive presentation of all features made it such a delight to peruse! I particularly liked the feature on David Card, as well as the interview with Omar El Akkad. Though I was sad to read that Brian Hennen had died â he was on my AMS Executive as the Senior Meds rep that year, and I knew about his outstanding career as a physician and medical educator.
Stewart Goodings, Artsâ62
The photo (above) jumped out at my husband and I (both Scâ98s) from the last Queenâs Alumni Review, as we were both on the Varsity Nordic ski team from 1995 to 1998 and recognized the ski suits this group was wearing. We wore the same ones (they were literally passed down year after year and were OLD). I got in touch with my brother (Scâ95), who was also with the team from 1992 to 1995, and we both reached out to others we knew who were on the team in earlier years. This photo was not taken on Queenâs campus, but at the OUAs in 1991 in Sudbury and this is the Varsity Nordic ski team from that year.