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Director of Intramural Sports Geoffrey N. Spies said Eliot’s participation rate was exceptional...

Author: By Alan J. Tabak, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Eliot House Brings Home Straus Cup | 5/19/2004 | See Source »

...thing most necessary to prevent guerrilla attacks on the battlefield and terrorist attacks at home. And no matter what anyone says, there is just no attractive way to extract information from people who don't want to give it. "This is tough, tough business," as Major General Geoffrey Miller, the new commanding officer at Abu Ghraib, told reporters last week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq: What Works and What Doesn't Work: The Rules Of Interrogation | 5/17/2004 | See Source »

...face courts-martial over the affair, and the officer in charge of the prison, Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, has been suspended. Attorneys for the accused say their clients were only following orders to soften up the prisoners for interrogation and that the guards are being made scapegoats. Major General Geoffrey Miller, the former head of operations at the detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is now running the prison...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Humiliation In An Iraqi Jail | 5/10/2004 | See Source »

...Bush isn’t out here, but there is a lot of excitement and I guess that’s what really matters,” said Geoffrey D. Kearney ’07, a member of the College Dems. “I was hoping Bush would arrive and we could give him a hard time about his policies...

Author: By Evan M. Vittor, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Protest Bush in Boston | 3/26/2004 | See Source »

...creator David Milch whether pioneers in 1876 really swore like the Sopranos, and the former Yale instructor quotes Geoffrey Chaucer's 14th century The Miller's Tale, which used the same anatomical slur that Calamity Jane does (though, in Middle English, it started with a q). Milch says most of our high-megaton profanities are centuries old, and accounts of the West "are full of the testimony of people whose sensibilities have been scandalized by the resourcefulness of the human spirit in fitting so many obscenities in the most ordinary declarative sentence." This, he says, was the point: Deadwood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: True Grit | 3/22/2004 | See Source »

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