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・ Geoffrey Coles
・ Geoffrey Colin Guy
・ Geoffrey Colin Shephard
・ Geoffrey Collins
・ Geoffrey Collins (cricketer, born 1909)
・ Geoffrey Collins (cricketer, born 1918)
・ Geoffrey Colvin
・ Geoffrey Connard
・ Geoffrey Cook
・ Geoffrey Cooper
・ Geoffrey Cooper (RAF officer)
・ Geoffrey Copleston
・ Geoffrey Corbett
・ Geoffrey Cornish
・ Geoffrey Cory-Wright
Geoffrey Cowan
・ Geoffrey Cox
・ Geoffrey Cox (Australian politician)
・ Geoffrey Cox (British politician)
・ Geoffrey Cox (journalist)
・ Geoffrey Cranswick
・ Geoffrey Crawley
・ Geoffrey Crawshay
・ Geoffrey Cridge
・ Geoffrey Crook
・ Geoffrey Cross, Baron Cross of Chelsea
・ Geoffrey Crossick
・ Geoffrey Crossley
・ Geoffrey Crowther, Baron Crowther
・ Geoffrey Curran


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Geoffrey Cowan : ウィキペディア英語版
Geoffrey Cowan

Geoffrey Cowan is an American lawyer, professor, author, and non-profit executive. He is currently the president of (The Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands ) and a University Professor at the University of Southern California, where he holds the Annenberg Family Chair in Communication Leadership and directs the Annenberg School's (Center on Communication Leadership & Policy ). Cowan was appointed to his position at Sunnylands in 2010 to turn the 200-acre estate of Ambassador Walter Annenberg and his wife Leonore into "a venue for important retreats for top government officials and leaders in the fields of law, education, philanthropy, the arts, culture, science and medicine." Since Sunnylands reopened in 2012, Cowan has helped to arrange a series of meetings and retreats there. In 2013-14, President Barack Obama convened bilateral meetings at Sunnylands with President Xi Jinping of China and with King Abdullah II of Jordan.
== Background and education ==
Geoffrey Cowan was born to a Jewish family〔(Jewish Journal: "What do 98 L.A. Jewish leaders think about the Iran agreement?" ) August 13, 2015〕 on May 8, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois. He is the son of Louis G. Cowan, former president of the CBS television network and professor at the Columbia School of Journalism. His mother, Polly Spiegel Cowan, was a TV and radio producer, and a civil rights activist who started Wednesdays in Mississippi together with Dorothy Height.
Cowan is a graduate of both the Dalton School (class of 1956) and the Choate School (class of 1960). He went on to graduate from Harvard College (class of 1964), where he studied American History and Literature, and was an editor of The Harvard Crimson. He is a 1968 graduate of Yale Law School.

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