Word: geoffrey
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...House of Commons, Tory M.P. Geoffrey Lloyd had concluded a long and bitter attack on the government's gasoline rationing policy. Lloyd swept his eyes over the thinned-out ranks of the Laborites, and turned to the Speaker. Said he: ". . . We . . . propose to divide the House," i.e., call for a vote on an earlier motion to adjourn...
VARSITY TRACK--Major Track H--Richard G. Barwise '52, Ronald S. Berman '52, David R. Carter '50, Edward E. Grutzner '52, Thomas J. McGrath '52, Harvey H. Thayer '50, Geoffrey H. Tootell '51, Donald E. Trimble '50, and John B. Denton, Jr. '50, Manager...
Townsend, a senior and a concentrator in English, entered College in 1945. His Army career was unhappy one of his friends Geoffrey Groff-Smith '49 said. According to Groff-Smith, Townsend failed to mix with his fellows and got "one bad deal after another...
Remember the Brontosaurus. Geoffrey Crowther, brilliant editor of the Economist, in a series of broadcasts this month put the British economic situation in careful perspective. Said...
Britain's Geoffrey Gorer, critic extraordinary of Africa, Japan, Russia and the U.S., has turned suddenly timid before his own country. In "Some Notes on the British Character" for the final issue of Horizon (TIME, Nov. 28), Gorer first disqualifies himself as an expert ("I cannot make such an analysis; it demands a degree of detachment which I can only achieve spasmodically and for very short periods"), then reaches some tentative conclusions. His most novel notion is that the British...