Word: geoffrey
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Tutoring schools should thrive because of this new ruling." declared Mr. Geoffrey Baker '19 of the Manter Hall School. "This fall our attendance will fall off, but just think of next June! All the men will come then and will require twice as much tutoring, as they will have forgotten so much in a year's time. A year from next September we will have innumerably more students than we would have had, if this new ruling had not been promulgated...
...year examinations. L. H. Duggan is Chairman and Isadore Zarakov, Sub-Chairman of this body. The members of the committee are; Dwight Barnum of Boston; Joseph Choate Bickford of Pelham, N. Y.; James Calvin Cooley 2nd of Milton; John Brooke Durant of Cambridge; Richard Thomas Flood of Brookline; Geoffrey McNair Gates of Elyria, O., Lewis Henderson Gordon of Flushing, N. Y.; Willard Howard of West Roxbury; Henry Bigelow Jackson of Milton; Sidney Stanley Rudman of Roxbury; Oliver Stevens Sughrue of Boston; Christian Henry Weymer of Syracuse, N. Y., and John Fonda Ward Whitbeck of Bronxville...
...Barry, H. R. Browning, Edwin Farnham, J. M. Gates, H. C. Pierce, Geoffrey Platt, W. K. Rice, H. P. Travis, Clarence Whitman, C. H. Weymer, manager, L. H. Duggan, assistant manager...
...sophomores have made a particularly good position this fall. Geoffrey Platt '27, captain of last year's Fresh man eight, and J. W. Gates '27, who rowed at seat four in the same beat, have held their seats in crew X at seats seven and six respectively in the face of stern opposition. While the present seating order cannot be taken as indicative of the way the crews will row in the spring, the present lineup will undoubtedly serve as a nucleus around which Coach Stevens will build the first eight which rows against Yale in June...
When a man gives his blood to save the life of another, whether on the field of honor or on the operating tables, it has long been conventional to regard him as a hero. Comes Dr. Geoffrey Keynes of St. Bartholomew's Hospital, England, with a denial that there is any virtue of sacrifice in the act of offering one's blood for transfusion. Positive benefit rather than injury is to be expected from the deed. Said he: "It should be widely known that a healthy young man can part with a considerable amount of blood without...