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109 result(s) for "Zeigler, John"
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Revs on small scale
JOHN Zeigler organised a great fundraiser for the Fred Hollows Foundation at Lamborghini's South Yarra showroom, where guests raced slot cars on...
Future of Bryce needs full airing before the public
  The precedent of a piecemeal sale of the 209 acres of [Bryce] land worries some mental health advocates who believe that the sale of the property to the university should be on an \"all or nothing\" basis. One, in a conversation with the editorial board of The Tuscaloosa News, characterized the sale of the parking land as \"nibbling away\" at Bryce's resources. While he said he has no concern about selling the entire Bryce campus to the university, he said the state should demand a \"fair price\" for the property - one that will allow construction of a new hospital that is at least large enough to treat the people now served by Bryce. He told the audience Wednesday, \" ... we want to make sure we have a positive plan in place, and if that plan says we need a state-of-the-art hospital and numerous clinics for a better admissions system, then that's what we'll do.\"
Row Hard No Excuses
By DENNIS HARVEY Luke Wolbach's compelling \"Row Hard No Excuses\" follows two middle-aged American men who compete in a 3,000mile transatlantic rawing race, an incredible challenge most people would be oughty proud simply to fimafa. While Wolbach (whose father and fellow producer, Bill, rowed at Harvard) made sure these principals had cameras to record their odyssey, much footage here was contributed by other racing teams who'd recorded their own audiovisual mementos.
John Zeigler a literary treasure
The first two were for poems and the third was for a short story. Poems were accepted by Harper's Bazaar and The New York Herald Tribune. The third acceptance letter came from a recently reissued anthology of writing by solders and sailors called \"Fighting Words,\" which published his story, \"Day Off.\" \"Still Is The Heart\" is reprinted with permission of the author. It is published in \"Alaska and Beyond, Selected Poems\" by [John Zeigler], Tradd Street Press, 1984, Charleston. \"Toss\" is reprinted with permission of the author. It is published in \"The Edwin Poems\" by John Zeigler, Xlibris Corp., 2007.
Across the waves; Concord native's quest documented in new film
\"If he had been born 100 years ago, [Tom Mailhot] would've been one of those adventurers exploring new lands,\" Mailhot's former girlfriend, Sarah Evertson, says in the film. \"But there aren't a whole lot of options for men these days to go on quests like that.\" \"Macadamia nuts - you chew them and they turn into sawdust,\" Mailhot said. \"You can't swallow them.\" \"It was one of the greatest feelings,\" Mailhot said. \"I've only experienced that feeling a few other times in my life, that sense of accomplishment.\"
Margaret J. Zeigler
  She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, James and Jane Zeigler, of Shamokin; a granddaughter, Michelle Burnes and her husband, Jared, of Portland, Ore.; one grandson, Joshua Zeigler, of Shamokin; two sisters, Ann O'Leary, of Shamokin, and Pauline Snyder, of Hollywood, Fla.; several nieces, nephews and step-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by two children, David Zeigler and Deanne Zeigler-Breining; three brothers, Francis, John and Joseph Fedorko; and a baby sister at birth.
Four area football teams will open District III play Friday
  In addition to Bermudian Springs, the fourth and final seed in Class AA, the Hanover area will send three other teams - Gettysburg, South Western and Littlestown - into the tournament. District III Football Chairman John Zeigler said Annville-Cleona's field does not have lights and the district committee wanted the option of a Saturday raindate. Zeigler said Gettysburg chose that site for two potential playoff games after its own stadium was ruled inadequate. Zeigler said several factors weighed into the decision, but one was paramount.
June 28 meeting set about Wallace Center
\"If there are BRAC-related possibilities or other jobs that might come to the area, we want the Wallace Center on their radar screen,\" [John Zeigler] said. \"Our goal is to hand out the plan, go over recommendations and let people ask questions,\" Zeigler said. \"The plan will suggest types of uses, but not specifics.\" Morgan County lawmakers began getting notices about the meeting late last week. Rep. Bill Dukes, D-Decatur, said he believes area officials see the property as a site for \"highest-end, high- technology multi-use\" industry and businesses with high-salary jobs.
MEETING THE OCEAN'S NEXT CHALLENGE
\"I love to race. I love the water, and this is the ultimate challenge,\" Zeigler offers as explanation. \"I may never want to see another oar, or sit on a rowboat seat, or see [Tom Mailhot], again after the race is over.\" And then, Zeigler, a 50-year-old with a chiseled physique and the steely demeanor of a state trooper, laughs from his gut because he knows that not even the prospect of sore buns or a friendship damaged from overexposure is enough to keep him from passing up the monumental thrill of going up against his fellow man, the wiles of nature, and himself. Zeigler, 200 pounds of muscle, works out on a rowing machine every day. (The race is likely to melt away 20 percent to 30 percent of every entrant's body weight). On weekends, he and Mailhot take a brief break from working on the boat to practice rowing in another of Zeigler's self-built boats. In August, Zeigler ferried the unfinished boat to Essex, Mass., an area of the country more hospitable to ships, shipbuilding, and ship fanatics. He now makes the nine-hour round-trip drive there every weekend to help Mailhot finish the sanding and fairing, which is critical for the boat to sail as straight and smoothly as possible.