Word: geoffrey
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...GEOFFREY C. KELLY Ann Arbor, Mich...
...officers for 1965 last night. They are: William G. Lee '66, president: Charles E. Flenning '66, vice-president; Dudley H. Ladd '66 secretary; Benjamin M. Friedman '66, treasurer; Paul N. Fredlund '66, Orientation Committee chairman; R. Wald Shelton Jr. '67, schools chairman: Vanghn C. Williams '66, guides chairman; and Geoffrey B. Shields '67, athletic chairman...
...Tories suffered particularly painful embarrassment in the defeat of several of their Cabinet members: ex-Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's son Maurice, who was Economic Secretary to the Treasury, lost in Halifax; Postmaster-General Reginald Bevins was beaten in Liverpool; Health Minister Anthony Barber fell at Doncaster; and Geoffrey Rippon, Minister of Works, was defeated at Norwich. But Labor had a bad local setback too. Patrick Gordon Walker, slated to be Foreign Secretary, was beaten in his constituency of Smethwick, a part of Birmingham where the race issue is raging because of heavy immigration by West Indians, Pakistanis...
...unfathomable honor, then, is due those 38 human beings who have been themselves declared the subject of a semester's course of study by this great University! These men are: Aristophanes (Greek 105a) Aristotle (Philosophy 105) Bertolt Brecht (German 160) Hieronymus Bosch (Fine Arts 156) Miguel Cervantes (Spanish 124) Geoffrey Chaucer (English 115) Samuel Coleridge (English 257) Dant'e Alighieri (Italian 120) Charles Dickens (English 259a) Fyodor Dostoevsky (Slavic 155) Jonathan Edwards (English 276) T.S. Eliot (English 267) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (German 120) Nikolai Gogol (Slavic 154) Henrik Ibsen (Scandinavian 1) Immanuel Kant (Philosophy 130) John Keats (English...
...even Mummy Brown is gone altogether. Geoffrey Roberson-Park, managing director of London's venerable C. Roberson color makers, regretfully admits that the firm has run out of mummies. "We might have a few odd limbs lying around somewhere," he apologized, "but not enough to make any more paint. We sold our last complete mummy some years ago for, I think, ?3. Perhaps we shouldn't have. We certainly can't get any more...