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・ Greg Childs (American football)
・ Greg Christian
・ Greg Christopher
・ Greg Christy
・ Greg Cipes
・ Greg Clark
・ Greg Clark (Canadian politician)
・ Greg Clark (journalist)
・ Greg Clark (linebacker)
・ Greg Clark (tight end)
・ Greg Clark (urbanist)
・ Greg Blosser
・ Greg Blue
・ Greg Blum
・ Greg Boester
Greg Boll
・ Greg Bollo
・ Greg Bonin
・ Greg Bonnen
・ Greg Booker
・ Greg Boone
・ Greg Booth
・ Greg Boulton
・ Greg Bownds
・ Greg Boyd
・ Greg Boyd (American football)
・ Greg Boyd (theologian)
・ Greg Boyed
・ Greg Boyer
・ Greg Boyer (musician)


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Greg Boll : ウィキペディア英語版
Greg Boll

Greg Boll (born June 27, 1961) is a former American politician and member of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party (DFL Party). Boll was, somewhat unintentionally, one of the key players in the DFL Party’s “firestorm” that swept through southwestern Minnesota in the mid-1980s at the height of the Midwestern Farm Crisis. The party’s onslaught led to an unprecedented take-over of nearly all the legislative seats in southwestern Minnesota in the 1986 elections.〔http://www.dglobe.com/ Archive-4/20/93〕
Dubbed the DFL’s “hatchet man” by Minnesota Republicans,〔http://www.dglobe.com/ Archive-2/10/1986 (Erickson-Menning)〕 Boll actively engaged the media to hammer away at the Republicans over what he maintained were their failed policies in rural America, using the farm crisis as the basis for his attacks. He also supported the somewhat militant Groundswell movement in its quest to bring political and social change on behalf of the region’s farmers. Utilizing a steady stream of scathing editorials and letters-to-the-editor in over thirty area newspapers, he made the case for change over the course of five election cycles, helping the DFL experience unprecedented success in the traditionally Republican small towns and rural communities of the region.〔http://www.dglobe.com/ Archive-12/83-4/93〕
==Youth and early activism in Southern Minnesota==
According to some who knew him, Boll had a bit of a “bad boy” reputation early on—a reputation he later channeled successfully into brash, no-nonsense political change. Growing up in Minnesota and Wisconsin, his conservative religious background and schooling at a Lutheran college in New Ulm served as the contrasting catalyst for the more liberal views he displayed once he became active in the Democratic Party.
While in college, Boll worked with Rudy Perpich’s 1982 gubernatorial campaign and with Mark Dayton’s bid for the U.S. Senate against incumbent Senator Dave Durenberger. Briefly managing a state senate campaign in the New Ulm area for former New Ulm mayor and state representative Tony Eckstein, he later moved to Worthington, where he worked as administrator and later chief of a security agency and became active in the community as a church youth leader and a member of several local boards. He quickly gained the attention of area Democrats through his editorials in the region's newspapers.

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