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da Vinci Surgery - Jeffrey Miller , MD - Cardiothoracic
da Vinci Surgery - Jeffrey Miller, MD - Cardiothoracic
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  Jeffrey S. Miller , M.D., Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota
Jeffrey S. Miller, M.D., Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota
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  Jeffrey S. Miller , MD - North County Radiology Medical Group
Jeffrey S. Miller, MD - North County Radiology Medical Group
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Born Jeffrey Glenn Miller
February 28, 1950(1950-02-28)
Died May 4, 1970 (aged 20)
Kent, Ohio, U.S.
Unretouched original version of John Filo's iconic Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the dead body of Jeffrey Miller minutes after he was shot by the National Guard.

Jeffrey Glenn Miller (March 28, 1950 – May 4, 1970) was a student at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio when he was shot and killed by Ohio National Guardsmen in the Kent State shootings. Shortly before his death, in May 1970, Miller had transferred to Kent State from Michigan State University. While at Michigan State, Miller pledged Phi Kappa Tau fraternity where his older brother had been a member. He and his brother had always been close, even sharing a birthday. After his brother graduated from Michigan State, Jeff found himself feeling increasingly out of touch with those he knew at Michigan State. During the summer of 1969, an old friend from New York who attended Kent State urged Jeff to consider transferring. Jeff quickly adapted to Kent State and soon had a large stable of friends, including both Allison Krause and Sandy Scheuer who would both die with him on May 4.

The initially unarmed Miller had taken an active part in the protests that day. However, he used a tear-gas canister as a weapon by throwing it toward the Ohio National Guardsmen. The protest, originally called to protest the expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia, had morphed into a protest against the presence of the Ohio National Guard on the Kent State campus.[1] When he was shot, he was facing the Guardsmen while standing in an access road leading into the Prentice Hall parking lot at a distance of approximately 265 ft.[2] A single bullet entered his open mouth and exited at the base of his posterior skull, killing him instantly.[3] John Filo's iconic Pulitzer Prize-winning photo, the most famous picture from the event, features fourteen-year-old runaway Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over Miller's body.

Three other students were killed in the shootings: Allison Beth Krause, Sandra Lee Scheuer, and William Knox Schroeder. The shootings led to protests and a national student strike, causing hundreds of campuses to close because of both violent and non-violent demonstrations. The Kent State campus remained closed for six weeks. Five days after the shootings, 100,000 people demonstrated in Washington, D.C., against the war and protesting the killing of unarmed students on a college campus.

Miller was cremated and his ashes placed in the mausoleum (Unit 7, Alcove H-O, Column O, Niche 1) at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York. A memorial has been erected at Plainview-Old Bethpage John F. Kennedy High School, the school that replaced Miller's high school in Plainview, New York. Miller's mother had been a secretary to the principal of J.F. Kennedy H.S. in the 1960s. There is a Kent State Memorial Lecture Fund at MIT established in 1970 by one of Jeffrey Miller’s childhood friends.

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