Rodney Wilson became Queen’s first full-time strength and conditioning coach this year.
Photo:
Matthew Rushworth
Goaltender Ryan Gibb won the OUA East most valuable player award last season with the Gaels. He’s now playing professionally for the New Mexico Scorpions.
Credit:
Journal File Photo
The Wolfe Island Wind Project park, a $475 million project, will have 86 turbines when it’s complete in June. The park is designed to power about 75,000 homes.
Photo:
Matthew Rushworth
Photo:
Matthew Rushworth
Timber Timbre will come through town for Apple Crisp’s March Break Maddness.
Credit:
Supplied
Despite his lyrics’ ability to conjure darker images, Timber Timbre’s Taylor Kirk said his music works with a range of dynamics.
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Supplied
Catch Bruce Peninsula next week with local supergroup The Gertrudes.
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Supplied
Rock Plaza Central’s rock paired with local fellow Reuben deGroot’s country will grace the stage of Next Church.
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Supplied
Michael McGowan’s latest offering—telling the story of a spontaneous departure from an impending marriage, a lacklustre job and a fatal diagnosis—recently won the People’s Choice Award at the Kingston Canadian Film Festival.
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Supplied
Downtown Owl
Boys Will Be Boys: The Glory Days and Party Nights of the Dallas Cowboys Dynasty
Harvard Medical School students recently reported concerns about relationships between professors and pharmaceutical companies.
Photo:
Matthew Rushworth
With the Wolfe Island wind farm nearing completion, site supervison Mike Jablonicky says each turbine will generate enough power to run 800 homes.
Photo:
Matthew Rushworth
SGPS President Jeff Welsh says the proposed student fee reduction for ESS students is feasible, it’s just a question of what level the cut will actually be.
Credit:
Journal File Photo
On Mar. 6, members of Queen’s Action Backing Climate Change staged a “die-in” in front of the Board of Trustees meeting to bring attention to Queen’s carbon footprint.
Photo:
Tyler Ball
Billeh Nickerson, last year’s writer in residence, says writers in residences are walking institutional memory and the literary ambassadors of Canadian literature.
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File Photo
This year’s writer in residence, Helen Humphries (right), is holding office hours on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 2 to 5 p.m.
Credit:
File Photo
Credit:
Journal File Photo
After graduating from Queen’s, Grace O’Connell, ArtSci ’06, went on to make her mark on the literary world.
Credit:
File Photo
To avoid dealing with total strangers when it comes to publishing your work, just do it yourself.
Photo:
Tyler Ball
If your creative writing covers a broad range of themes, don’t worry—so do the publications.
Photo:
Matthew Rushworth
The Travelers, War and Peace, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, The Book of Negroes and Leonard Cohen’s Selected Poems are five books that come strongly recommended by key Queen’s individuals.
Photo:
Tyler Ball
Abbey Stansfield, ArtSci ’09 and a fanfiction writer, says even though fanfiction writing is just a hobby, it’s nice to know it’s not a complete waste of her time.