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...sample of the wide variety of nicknames his roommates have created for him: Well, the ones that rhyme with my last name are: Jetlag, Barf-bag, Old Hag, Zig Zag (a roommate walks in, saying: "What's up, Leftbag?"), Saddlebag, Teabag, Trashbag... and of course the ones that rhyme with my first name: Odd, Sod, Mossad, Facade, and Re-todd. That's just about all we can probably print, and I have no idea what "Leftbag" means...

Author: By Jonathan A. Bresman, | Title: Profile | 2/16/1995 | See Source »

...late September or early October. "Plainly an orchestration campaign is now under way," he says. And the White House's hair-trigger statements? "I suppose that's just smart. The sense you get now is maybe they want to throw people off, so that when they're expected to zig, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HAITI . . . SHOWBOATING | 9/8/1994 | See Source »

...they now? Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Gerald Ford, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Norman Schwarzkopf, Tom Landry, Bart Starr, Roger Staubach, Mike Ditka, Marilyn Quayle and Ruth ((Mrs. Norman Vincent)) Peale? On the success road along with Mario Cuomo, Larry King, Willard Scott, Paul Harvey, the Rev. Robert Schuller and Zig Ziglar. The show grew in marquee power when it moved on to Dallas last month with six starters on the motivational dream team -- Bush, Schwarzkopf, Staubach, Schuller, Peale and Ziglar -- talking to 16,500 people who had paid from $49 to $225 to be in Reunion Arena for eight hours...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Let's Get Motivated | 5/2/1994 | See Source »

...Francisco seminar, which drew 6,000 customers, I paid $110 extra (regular price: $49) for what I was assured would be an "awesome!" seat up front in the arena and a 7 a.m. breakfast with Zig Ziglar, a former pots- and-pans salesman billed as "America's No. 1 Motivational Speaker." Over doughnuts and coffee with 300 other "VIPs," I nodded and laughed along with everyone else at stories of his hardscrabble boyhood in Yazoo City, Mississippi, where his mother said motivational things like this: "You're going to have to lick that calf over again. That job might...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Let's Get Motivated | 5/2/1994 | See Source »

Ziglar was followed by the Success tour's organizer, Peter Lowe, 35, the son of Canadian missionaries. Lowe, small and red-haired, looked like the teenager Ron Howard once played on Happy Days as he gave an hour and 15 minutes of tips on "Success Skills." No Zig Ziglar, he comes across as a mechanical model of the older man, finally zeroing in on fear -- a word he defined as "False Evidence Appearing Real" -- as the reason for business failure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Let's Get Motivated | 5/2/1994 | See Source »

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