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The book North to the Pole, written by Will Steger and Paul Schurke, was published in 1986. It is a first-person account of an expedition to the North Pole and illustrates how seven men and one woman set out by dog-sled to accomplish the goal of completing an expedition to the North Pole without resupply and only with the help of traditional navigation techniques.
1990 International Trans-Antarctica Expedition was a 6,021-kilometre (3,741-mile), 220-day expedition and the first-ever non-mechanized crossing of Antarctica. [1] The six-member, international team was co-led by U.S. team member, Will Steger and French team member, Dr. Jean-Louis Étienne.
Image of Will Steger. Will Steger (born August 27, 1944, in Richfield, Minnesota [1]) is a prominent spokesperson for the understanding and preservation of the Arctic and has led some of the most significant feats in the field of dogsled expeditions; such as the first confirmed dogsled journey to the North Pole (without re-supply) in 1986, [2] the 1,600-mile south–north traverse of Greenland ...
"Room to Move" is a pop song written by Simon Climie, Rob Fisher (duo Climie Fisher) and Dennis Morgan. It first appeared on Climie Fisher 's debut album Everything , released in 1987. [ 2 ]
move to sidebar hide (Top) 1 Life and career. 2 References. Toggle the table of contents. ... Herm Steger (August 26, 1926 – December 28, 2013) was an American ...
Crossing to Safety is a 1987 semi-autobiographical novel by "The Dean of Western Writers", [1] Wallace Stegner.It gained broad literary acclaim and commercial popularity. In Crossing to Safety, Stegner explores the mysteries of friendship, and it extends Stegner's distinguished body of work that had already earned him a Pulitzer Prize (for 1971's Angle of Repose) [2] and the National Book ...
Room to Move" is a 1987 song performed by Climie Fisher and Animotion. Room to Move may also refer to: "Room to Move", song by John Mayall from The Turning Point album "Room to Move", episode of the Australian TV series Winners, directed by John Duigan and spun off into a 1987 movie adaptation
Yet Steger brings a melancholy Central European sense of history- his objects tend to remember, or cause, great pain: “It pours, this poisonous, sweet force,” Steger writes of “Saliva,” “Between teeth, when you spit your own little genocide.” Publishers Weekly, “The Book of Things”