Word: macgowan
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...following have been elected regular editors of the Monthly: C.E. Hale '10, of New York City; A. Seeger '10, of Mexico City, Mexico; N.O. Foerster '10, of Pittsburg, Pa.; K.R. Macgowan '11, of St. Louis, Mo.: J.G. Gilkey '12, of Watertown; R. Douglas '12, of Chillicothe, Ohio...
...Club--J. E. Dewey 1L., G. L. Harding '10, R. S. Hoar 2L., A. P. Loring 1L.; Democratic Club--L. D. Bejach 2L., J. J. Donahue 2L., R. W. Stewart 1L.; Republican Club--E. B. Caiger 2L., N. C. Nash 3L., J. R. Gilman 1L.; Socialistic Club--K. R. MacGowan '11, W. Lippmann '10, A. T. Shohl...
...dramatics, and contains a leader "Miss Adams and Joan of Arc" explaining her views on the character; the prologue to Schiller's "Maid of Orleans" translated by Professor W. G. Howard; "Impressions of an Actor" by Tyrone Power; and "Death and the Dicers," by F. Schenck '09, K. R. Macgowan writes of "Honor versus Proctors," and N. Foerster of Lafcadio Hearn...
...Honor versus Proctors," Mr. Kenneth R. Macgowan '11 severely condemns placing proctors in charge of examinations, because that system seems to him humiliating, undemocratic, and unsuccessful. Few will, I think, agree with him. In my opinion, at any rate, cheating in examinations is so rare as to be almost negligible. Nor ought there to be a sense of humiliation because of the presence of a proctor; he is there to protect the honest against the unfair competition of the possibly dishonest. To call that "espionage" is, it seems to me, improper; as well take offence at the mildly inquiring...
...Macgowan has a story of India, "In the Name of the Empire," which suggests Kipling in subject, but without the terse directness of Kipling's style. In "The Army of Unalterable Law" Mr. Pulsifer tries to show a larger principle in the universe; somewhat of the same nature is Mr. Follett's "Star-Wondering" in which he sets the stars to pondering the old question which the first thinking man proposed to himself, the question which played so large a part in the schemes of the early Greek physical philosophers--"What is this world about us?" Like Odysseus, Mr. Blythe...