Leroy M. Zimmerman (born 1932), former Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Leroy Anderson | Eric Zimmerman | Nolwenn Leroy | Paul Zimmerman | Leroy Van Dyke | Ryan Zimmerman | Michael E. Zimmerman | LeRoy R. Hafen | LeRoy Myers | Leroy Jenkins (jazz musician) | Leroy Jenkins | Leroy Burrell | JT LeRoy | Jacques Leroy de Saint Arnaud | George Zimmerman | Elwood Zimmerman | Claire Leroy | William Leroy Broun | Stafford LeRoy Irwin | Ron Zimmerman | Leroy "Satchel" Paige | LeRoy Pope Walker | Leroy M. Zimmerman | Leroy Merlin | Leroy McGuirk | Leroy Loggins | Leroy Keyes | LeRoy Jolley | Leroy Holt | Leroy Hoard |
Coach Paul Brown did not want the new team named after him, so he looked into naming the club the Panthers.
Charles S. Zimmerman, (1896–1983), American socialist politician and trade union official
His mother was born in Wisconsin of parents who were natives of Stuttgart.
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He was attacked as a member of America First, but he denied membership therein, although he generally followed the isolationist position.
Zimmerman's next three nominations – for "Trials and Tribble-ations", "Far Beyond the Stars" and "Prodigal Daughter" – were shared with McIlvain and set decorator Laura Richarz.
The field was pioneered in the late 1990s by integral theorist Sean Esbjörn-Hargens and environmental philosopher Michael E. Zimmerman.
John C. Zimmerman, Sr. (1835–1935), mayor of the City of Flint 1895–1896
LeRoy S. Zimmerman (born 1934), former Pennsylvania Attorney General
Michael E. Zimmerman (born 1946), philosopher at the University of Colorado at Boulder
Music for a While is a musical composition by the English Baroque composer Henry Purcell, the second of four movements from his incidental music composed in 1692 (Z 583) to John Dryden's and Nathaniel Lee's play Oedipus.
In 2012 McIntosh partnered with integral authors and former EnlightenNext editors Carter Phipps, Elizabeth Debold and Andrew Cohen, together with University of Colorado philosopher Michael E. Zimmerman, to found the think tank, The Institute for Cultural Evolution.
Henry Purcell set to omen to Charles IX from act V, "Thy genius, lo", in two versions, the one for baritone (Z 604a) appearing in Orpheus Britannicus.
E. C. Zimmerman proposed a third division, the Heteromorphi, for several intermediate forms.