13 Ekim 2012 Cumartesi

Pizza Hut to Unveil P'Zolo Sandwich on Monday

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On Monday, June 4, Pizza Hut will begin offering their newest menu item, the P'Zolo.  According to NRN, the P'Zolo, "...resembles a wrap more than the chain’s calzone-like P’Zone, the P’Zolo targets the sandwich competition both in marketing and price point."
Photo by: Pizza Hut

The P'Zolo will come in three varieties, one for $3 and two for $5.  The varieties, all topped with Asiago cheese, include a, "...Meat Trio with Italian sausage, pepperoni, ham and cheese; Italian Steak with marinated steak, roasted vegetables and cheese; and Buffalo Chicken with white-meat chicken, buffalo seasoning and cheese. Each P’Zolo is served with a choice of ranch or marinara dipping sauce."

With no mention of a limited time offer, the P'Zolo looks to be a permanent menu addition at the over 10,000 Pizza Hut locations worldwide.

Togo's Returns to Arizona

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The official grand opening is set for Saturday, August 18, but Togo's in Gilbert is now ready for business.  The AZFoodDude reported on the second coming of Togo's to the Valley back in January and now with the first location having opened at 1520 W. Guadalupe Rd. #101 Gilbert, AZ 85233, the franchisee has his sights set on opening two more Togo's restaurants in the Valley.  The hours for the restaurant are:
  • Monday - Friday: 10am - 9pm
  • Saturday: 10:30am - 7pm
  • Sunday: 11am - 5pm
According to the press release, "To celebrate Togo's arrival in Arizona, two lucky Gilbert customers will win free sandwiches for one-year. Additionally, the local community is invited to attend the official Grand Opening all-day celebration, taking place on Saturday, August 18, 2012 with music, prizes, local fundraiser event and more!"

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/06/12/4556141/togos-arrives-in-arizona-with.html#storylink=cpy"To celebrate Togo's arrival in Arizona, two lucky Gilbert customers will win free sandwiches for one-year. Additionally, the local community is invited to attend the official Grand Opening all-day celebration, taking place on Saturday, August 18, 2012 with music, prizes, local fundraiser event and more!
Source: PR Newswire (http://s.tt/1ecq1)To celebrate Togo's arrival in Arizona, two lucky Gilbert customers will win free sandwiches for one-year. Additionally, the local community is invited to attend the official Grand Opening all-day celebration, taking place on Saturday, August 18, 2012 with music, prizes, local fundraiser event and more!
Source: PR Newswire (http://s.tt/1ecq1)To celebrate Togo's arrival in Arizona, two lucky Gilbert customers will win free sandwiches for one-year. Additionally, the local community is invited to attend the official Grand Opening all-day celebration, taking place on Saturday, August 18, 2012 with music, prizes, local fundraiser event and more!
Source: PR Newswire (http://s.tt/1ecq1)
Togo's, which is based in San Jose, CA and first opened in 1967, is known for their "West Coast" hot or cold sandwiches, but also offers up soups, salads, chips, cookies, and brownies.  You can check out the full Togo's menu here.

Subway's July $5 Featured Footlong - Buffalo Chicken

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In the event you don't think it's hot enough this time of year, Subway is giving us that extra kick with July's $5 featured footlong.  The Buffalo Chicken sandwich, which is now back on Subway's menu for good, has "......tender, juicy chicken tossed in a bold buffalo sauce with crisp green peppers and cool, creamy ranch on freshly baked bread."  

In terms of nutrition, you can check out this Subway site and calculate how many calories, fat, protein, etc. will be in the sandwich based on how you have your sandwich made.

Dairy Queen's July Blizzard of the Month - Chocolate Candy Shop

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Last month, Dairy Queen gave us the Turtle Brownie Blizzard.  This month however, Dairy Queen is switching things up with their new Chocolate Candy Shop Blizzard.  The Chocolate Candy Shop Blizzard is made of cocoa fudge, vanilla soft serve, and chocolate pieces filled with hazelnut creme, fudge, and caramel. 

The nutritional information for a medium Chocolate Candy Shop Blizzard includes 960 calories, 44 grams of fat (24 saturated), 108 grams of sugar, and 19 grams of protein.

Tucson's Legendary Zachary's Pizza is Closing

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Echoing the sentiments of Tucson Weekly, which broke the story, the AZFoodDude is sad to learn that Zachary's Pizza is closing on August 1.  There is not a lot of news officially as to why the Tucson staple is closing, but it is almost assuredly because business has been rough in an economy that continues to sputter.  A Facebook post by the restaurant on June 24 gives us a clue, "We will be cash only for a bit longer.  Please help support our business.  Summer has not been kind."

Like many folks, I was brought to Zachary's by friends of mine during a visit to Tucson.  It was after that first visit that I then introduced other friends of mine in the Valley to Zachary's incredible deep dish Chicago style pizza.  The place is so good that we have made the drive from Phoenix to Tucson just for Zachary's pizza on multiple occasions.  Now, that might sound like a long drive but employees of Zachary's will tell you of folks from all over who specifically stop for their pizza, including some regulars from New Mexico.

Near the UofA campus, now is a good time for those who want one last slice and for those who've never had the opportunity to see what all the fuss is about, to experience the hole-in-the-wall charm and head over to Zachary's.  The hours are 4pm - 10pm on Monday, 11am - 10pm Tuesday - Thursday, 11am - 11pm on Friday, noon - 11pm on Saturday and noon - 10pm on Sunday.

12 Ekim 2012 Cuma

Attitude carries Lackey to Q-C Sports Hall of Fame : Quad Cities High School Sports - QCVarsity.com

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Matt Lackey

Attitude carries Lackey to Q-C Sports Hall of Fame : Quad Cities High School Sports - QCVarsity.com:


John Puebla remembers the trepidation he felt almost every time he sent pint-sized Matt Lackey onto the mat to wrestle someone his own size.

The man who ran Moline’s Park Board wrestling program for more than 20 years said he was genuinely frightened, not for Lackey but for the other kid.

“He (Lackey) was just a little guy, but he was so aggressive,” Puebla said. “It used to scare me to watch. He was so confident. He didn’t care how big the other guy was or anything. He was going to go after him.”

That relentless, fearless approach took Lackey a long way in the sport of wrestling, to state championships, Big Ten championships and in 2003, an NCAA championship.

On May 2, it will carry him into the Quad-City Sports Hall of Fame. Lackey will be inducted at the Quad-City Times’ annual Salute to Sports.

“He’s one of those kids you don’t get very often,” said Moline athletic director Todd Rosenthal, who was Lackey’s wrestling coach in high school. “He’s a winner. He wants to win and he does not think about anything else. He just has a rare confidence. He really thought anything he got into he was going to win.”

Rosenthal said Lackey wasn’t necessarily his best wrestler in practice, largely because of his gregarious nature.

“But when the lights went on and there was an audience present, he was going to perform,” Rosenthal said. “He was unbelievable sometimes.”

Former Illinois coach Mark Johnson said Lackey was the best athlete he coached in his 17 years with the Illini. Like Rosenthal, he said Lackey went to another level when the spotlight came on.

“The more people there were there, the better he was,” Johnson said. “When you got to the Big Ten and NCAA meets and there were big crowds … that’s what he lived for.”

Lots of help

Lackey began wrestling for Puebla in the park board program when he was 5, but he figures his preparation for the rigors of the sport began before that, as the youngest of five children. Having three older brothers got him ready.

“The physical and mental abuse was rampant,” Lackey said. “We would get out and play football and they used to just crush me. I’d start crying and I’d start to walk home and they’d harass me so I would get mad and come back. Somewhere along the line, I’m sure that made me tougher.”

Ask Lackey to list people who influenced his career and he does a 10-minute monologue. It always opens with his parents — Paul Lackey, now retired from John Deere, and Nancy Lackey, who is retiring this year after many decades as the secretary at Garfield School in Moline.

“Dad deserves a lot of credit,” Lackey said. “He didn’t know a lot about wrestling, but he was a blue-collar guy. He knew about hard work and being tough. And for me, wrestling was 99 percent about working hard and being tough.”

Paul Lackey spent countless hours driving his youngest son to practices and tournaments, but he also established a template of effort and discipline.

“He always asked me if I wanted to be a state champ,” Lackey said. “I’d say, ‘Yes,’ and he’d say, ‘Then this is what we’re going to do.’”

Lackey also credits Puebla, junior high coach Joe Terronez and Rosenthal. He worked out with Kevin Puebla, John’s son, who preceded him as a state champion at Moline and an all-American at Illinois. He spent time on the mat with Bam Pustelnik, a star at United Township and Northern Iowa.

“Being able to work out with those kinds of people on a daily basis was huge,” Lackey said.

Moline assistant coach Marty Mayhew would pick up Lackey at his house at 5:30 a.m. and take him to run the golf course on Arsenal Island or the hills at Prospect Park. Another Maroons aide, John Naab, mercilessly pushed him in the weight room.

Then, of course, there was Johnson, a Rock Island Alleman grad and lifelong friend.

“I was just blessed to have that many people who cared about me and cared about wrestling,” Lackey said. “All of them helped me along the way.”

A ‘natural’ on the mat

Lackey admitted he was good at wrestling from the very beginning. Along with some God-given athletic ability, he had a feel for the sport that is impossible to teach.

“I don’t want to say it came easy to me, but I guess you could say I had a knack for it,” he said.

John Puebla refers to him as “a natural.”

“Every now and then you find one and you just go, ‘Whoa.’ He was eager to learn, willing to work hard …” Puebla said. “He loved the sport. Even as a small kid, he loved the challenge. He had no fear of getting hurt, no fear of going against a bigger guy, no fear of anything.”

Lackey won age group state titles in both the seventh and eighth grade, but as he moved into the high school ranks, Rosenthal warned Paul and Nancy Lackey their son might find things tougher at that level.

“Paul just said, ‘Rosey, he’s all yours,’” Rosenthal said. “That’s all they ever said to me.”

Lackey did struggle a little in high school. He finished third in the state at 119 pounds as a freshman but battled through an ankle injury and did not place at state as a sophomore.

He didn’t lose a match after that, though, going undefeated in both his junior and senior seasons with a freewheeling, crowd-pleasing style that even astonished his coach at times.

“I remember times when I would turn to Paul Carther, my assistant, and say, ‘What did he just do?’” Rosenthal said. “He would do like a cartwheel over a guy and get him from behind. He also could just grind it out and break wrestlers down with his talent. ... He just had a way of performing. It was a total treat.”

Going to Illinois

There never was any question where Lackey was going to wrestle in college.

When he was in the fifth grade, he went to an Alleman-Moline football game with his parents. Johnson, who was inducted into the Q-C Hall of Fame in 2000, had just been named the wrestling coach at Illinois and was there to watch his alma mater. Nancy Lackey spotted him in the stands and suggested they go talk to him.

“I couldn’t even tell you what was said,” Lackey said. “I don’t think I probably said much. But I got an Illinois wrestling T-shirt in the mail the next week. I couldn’t believe the guy even remembered who we were, but he got the name, tracked down an address and sent a T-shirt. That’s the kind of guy he is.”

Lackey became a regular at Johnson’s camps, and he was in Iowa City to watch the Illini in the 1995 NCAA championships. It didn’t hurt that Rosenthal was good friends with Johnson or that Steve Lackey, his older brother, had attended Illinois.

Other big-time programs never even bothered to contact him. Everyone knew where he was headed.

“I made one visit and committed early …” Lackey said. “It was a no-brainer. I wanted to be a national champ, and he was producing them.”

That did not mean Lackey had a lock on a spot in the Illini lineup. He redshirted as a freshman and in his second year was beaten out for a starting job by a fifth-year senior.

Having to wait his turn was difficult, but Lackey said he learned from it.

“It’s all part of a process,” he said. “I’ll take those two years out of the lineup to take what I got on the back end.”

Once he got into the lineup, he took full advantage, going 31-9 as a sophomore, 38-2 as a junior and 38-0 as a senior. He was named the Big Ten male athlete of the year for 2002-03.

But he said his most vivid memory of that period is a loss to Iowa State’s Joe Heskett in the 2002 NCAA championship match at 165 pounds. With the score tied at 2-2, Heskett scored a late takedown to win.

“It’s the toughest athletic-related experience I’ve ever had to deal with,” Lackey said. “Most people would look at it and think second place is pretty good. You should probably be happy with it. It would have been a better feeling to get my butt kicked. It was really an impactful experience.”

He never lost again at the college level. The following December at the Midlands, he ran into Heskett, who had graduated from Iowa State, and beat him 9-5. In the 2003 NCAA finals, he was the one who scored a late takedown, executing a textbook foot-sweep to beat Troy Letters of Lehigh, 6-3.

Two Olympic shots

The next logical step was to take a stab at the Olympics the following year, but Lackey admits he wasn’t entirely sure what he wanted to do. It showed in an early exit at the Olympic trials.

“Looking back, I’m not sure my heart was really in it the first time,” he said. “It’s just something I thought I should do.”

After that, Lackey took a job as a sales rep in Colorado and spent a few years being “a regular Joe.”

“But after 2 1/2 years of that, I started getting the itch again,’’ he said. “I missed wrestling.”

He spoke to Johnson, moved back to Champaign and began preparing for another run at the Olympics in 2008.

Very early in his comeback, he suffered a neck injury, underwent fusion surgery and was sidelined for six months. He didn’t get back on the mat until the fall of 2007, leaving him about eight months to gear up for the trials.

“I did the best I could,” Lackey said. “It had been three years and four months from the last time I’d put on a singlet.”

In a tournament in Arizona, he lost to NCAA champion Ben Askren of Missouri in a match in which Lackey said his feet “felt like I had 20-pound weights on each one.” However, he fought back to the third-place match, where he defeated Askren. He was on his way, determined to get what eluded him in 2004.

If anything, Lackey thinks he may have pushed too hard, trained too rigorously. He never felt right at the trials and was eliminated early again. The Olympic berth went to Askren.

“He gave it a good shot,” Johnson said. “The fact that he didn’t make (the Olympics) doesn’t change my opinion of Matt Lackey one bit. There are a lot of things that factor into it and it just didn’t work out.”

It was not to be Lackey’s last experience with wrestling.

He was involved for a few months with a gym in Ohio that trained athletes for mixed martial arts and other endeavors, came home to Moline for awhile and helped coach the Maroons while doing some substitute teaching, then finally landed a job as an assistant coach at Lock Haven University in Pennsylvania late in 2009.

He stayed there for two years before being hired in August as as assistant at the University at Buffalo. He thinks he might have finally found his niche.

“I really enjoy what I’m doing,” Lackey said. “It’s a lot of work, but I’m getting better at it every day.

“Most of the time I can’t see myself doing anything different.”

Matt Lackey timeline

1980: Born in Moline the youngest of five children of Paul and Nancy Lackey.

1985: Began wrestling in the Moline Park Board program.

1995: Finished third in the Illinois high school tournament at 119 pounds as a freshman; placed in top seven in both Greco-Roman and freestyle at Cadet national championships.

1996: Helped Moline to state team title despite nursing injured ankle; won 143-pound title and outstanding wrestler award at Cadet national championships.

1997: Went 42-0 and won Illinois high school championship at 145 pounds.

1998: Went 35-0 and won Illinois high school 152-pound title, winning final match by 25-10 score; finished high school career 158-13; won national junior championship at 154; named Illinois high school wrestler of the year and Moline Jaycees male athlete of the year.

1999: Redshirted as freshman at University of Illinois.

2000: Went 13-3 in limited action for the Illini at 165 pounds.

2001: Went 31-9 and finished third in NCAA meet at 165; named Illinois’ most improved wrestler.

2002: Won Big Ten title and finished second in NCAA meet, losing close match to Iowa State’s Joe Heskett; finished with record of 38-2.

2003: Won Big Ten and NCAA championships at 165, finishing with 38-0 record; named Big Ten’s male athlete of the year.

2004: Failed in bid to make U.S. Olympic team and took job as sales rep in Colorado.

2008: Again came up short in attempt to make Olympic team.

2009: Hired as assistant coach at Lock Haven University.

2011: Hired as assistant head coach of University at Buffalo.


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Which Moliner Said Mayberry Was Just Like the Town Where He Grew Up - Only Moline Was a Real Place?Andy Griffith Died. His Show Spun Off Mayberry RFD

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Spock, in the military, got Berry interested in Hollywood.


Legendary television actor Andy Griffith dead at 86, reports say | Fox News:


Legendary television actor Andy Griffith, who made a name for himself with his self-titled comedy "The Andy Griffith Show" and later on the long-running series “Matlock,” has died at the age of 86, according to multiple reports.

Griffith was rushed to a North Carolina hospital by an EMS team after they were called to his Roanoke home Tuesday morning. The actor’s close friend, former UNC President Bill Friday, confirmed the news to several sources, including TMZ and a local NBC affiliate.

The details surrounding the cause of his death were not immediately available.

Griffith first gained prominence in Hollywood after appearing in the Elia Kazan film “A Face in the Crowd.”
In 1960, he played the lead character in “The Andy Griffith Show,”  where he became a household name and a staple of American television. The show ran until 1968.

In 1986, he returned to television with the long-running series, “Matlock.”

He was later awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George Bush.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2012/07/03/legendary-television-actor-andy-griffith-dead-at-86-report-says/#ixzz1zZUtWe7Z


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When I read about Ken Berry on his website, many details about Moline echoed what others have said and I have thought:

"Ken Berry was already five-eighths of the way to Mayberry when he was born in Moline, Ill., on November 3, 1933. Kenneth Ronald Berry was the second child (joining sister Dona Rae) of Bernice and Eugene Darrell Berry, who at the time of Ken’s birth was an accountant for John Deere Company."

Early career:
"When I got the job and it took me away from home, that must have been very hard for my parents," Ken says. "But they were very supportive and it was really a thrilling experience for me. After the Horace Heidt show, I came back and finished high school in Moline. I used to drive up to Chicago once a week and take a voice lesson and a tap lesson in the same studio. But that didn’t last very long. After graduation, I went back out to California to look for work. And I didn’t get much at all."

Mayberry as Brigadoon
About Mayberry, Ken says, "It’s a wonderful place to visit and people would fantasize about living there. It’s a place like Brigadoon that shows up every hundred years. It’s a place you dream about living, but you know it’s fantasy and you don’t care."

Mayberry Like Moline
He adds, "I grew up among people very much like that -- a bigger town, but not much bigger -- and the neighborhood was very much like that and the people were very much like those characters. And it was fun for me to visit, too. It was one of my favorite half hours ever on television and that was long before I met Andy."

---

GJ - My wife Chris and I talk about how much we enjoyed the 40th reunion of the MHS 66 class. She has always felt a part of my class, even though she met them after graduation, when we were at Augustana.

We have had a number of discussions with people on Facebook. The common theme is how pleasant people were to each other in Moline. It is no surprise that Ken Berry had the same experience earlier.

My father knew many people from work and from graduating from MHS. We had a lapboard where all his classmates inscribed their names with a woodburner. All his classmates seemed to be named Eric Johnson, John Ericson, Eric Ericson, John Johnson, Sven Svenson, Sven Ericson, Eric Svenson, John Svenson, etc.

Once we were discussing a local politician, and dad said, "I cannot believe he would be like that. His father was one of my teachers. His word was his bond."

With my mother in the Moline school system and my father in business, I was connected to everyone - one way or another. The kindly attitude was expressed in many different ways. When I went to Augustana College, a bike ride away, my mother's classmates were there.

The daughter of Dr. Andreen taught education at Augustana. "Are you going to be a teacher, too?" she asked. I said, "No, never."

Later I learned that Dr. Andreen left his position as a noted professor at Yale to become president of a threadbare college on the banks of the Mississippi. The little portable college, which barely survived, has become one of the best liberal arts colleges in America. Looking back, we can see how much people sacrificed to create a better life for future generations. I wonder if the same will be said about us Boomers.

I can imagine Ken Berry recognizing the fictional characters of Mayberry being so much like Moliners. I will have to write about them too.

Some future posts will include the Flood, and the burial place of Charles Dickens' son.


Brigadoon: "It's Almost Like Being in Love."

Generosity of Fejervary pays for college scholarships today

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Fejervary mansion
The count and his mansion overlooking the Mississippi (Danube clone).
His grave in Davenport.


Generosity of Fejervary pays for college scholarships today:


April 05, 2011 5:04 pm  •  Alma Gaul(0) Comments

The mansion of Count Nicholas Fejervary (inset) was converted to an inn when the estate became a city park, and it was torn down in the mid-1930s. It stood about where the parking lot for the Fejervary Park aquatic center is now. (Contributed photos)
(5) More Photos
Q&A ABOUT NICHOLAS FEJERVARY

Q: Why did Nicholas Fejervary settle specifically in Davenport?

A: It's said that he wanted to avoid the commercial Eastern United States and the South's use of slavery, so came to "the West" and to Davenport, which reminded him of Hungary on the Danube River. He moved here when he was 41 years old with a wife and two children.

Q: What was his estate like?

A: He built a mansion of red brick; clay for the brick came from the site. The 21-acre estate had vineyards, an orchard, arbors and a running brook.

The estate was donated to the city in 1902 by Fejervary's daughter for use as a park. It is now about 75 acres, according to the city's website.

Initially, Fejervary's home was converted to an inn, but it was torn down in late 1933 or 1934, according to a brochure published by the now-defunct Fejervary Zoological Society, a support group. The home stood where the parking lot for the swimming pool is now.

The park has been a revolving door of attractions through the years - Monkey Island, Mother Goose Land and a zoo containing various types of animals.

Q: What was Fejervary like?

A: He was described as courtly and dignified, a gentlemen of the old school. He could read and speak English, Latin, Greek, German, Hungarian, French, Spanish, Italian and Sanskrit.

In Hungary, he had been a lawyer and a member of the legislature. It's said that when he came to Davenport, he carried "a gripsack full of gold."

Q: What happened to him and his family?

A: Fejervary died in 1895 at the age of 84 of Bright's disease, an old name for a kidney disease. He was preceded in death by his wife and teenage son. All are buried in Davenport's Oakdale Memorial Gardens. His daughter, Celestine, returned to Hungary. She did not have any descendants, according to Ferenc Beiwal, of Davenport, who researched the family history.

Q: In addition to the charitable trust that established a nursing home and now funds college scholarships, as well as the donation of his estate for a park, what other lasting impacts did Fejervary have on Davenport?

A: He was the driving force behind the raising of money for the Civil War monument on Main Street in Davenport and was described as "one of the makers of Davenport."



In the late 1840s, Count Nicholas Fejervary of Pest, Hungary, could see that the future was dicey for people like him.

A revolution seeking to overthrow his country's Austrian oppressors had failed, and in the aftermath, the property of noblemen such as himself was being confiscated. Worse, friends were being executed.

Fejervary decided to flee Hungary for a new life in America.

In 1853, he landed in Davenport, where he built an estate on land that is now Fejervary Park. He chose the location because the steep bluffs and river overlook reminded him of his home on the Danube River. One of the original buildings remains there today, a three-story carriage barn with fancy windows and trim that needs some repair.

The park is one of several legacies left by Fejervary, who grew his wealth by purchasing more than 3,000 acres of government land in Scott, Cedar and Muscatine counties and selling it at considerable profit.

When he died at age 84, he also established a charitable trust that in recent years has paid thousands of dollars in college scholarships for Scott County students and to various organizations such as Scott County 4-H, Big Brothers/Big Sisters, the Meal Service of Scott County and the former John Lewis Community Services.

This past fall, the Fejervary trustees filed papers to divest the trust and transfer $1.35 million to the Iowa State University Foundation to create a scholarship program that will provide, in perpetuity, substantial scholarships for students from Scott County majoring in agriculture.

After more than 100 years of administering the trust, the trustees - whose membership rolled over through the years through death and new appointments - decided to end the trust because taxes and administrative costs were draining too much from the principal and interest, and that was not in keeping with Fejervary's intent, according to documents filed in the Scott County Clerk of Court office.

Also, turning funds over to the nonprofit foundation for scholarships would be in keeping with Fejervary's goal of helping those in need and with an affiliation to agriculture. And it would avoid some tax liability for the trust, according to court documents.

By investing the money, Iowa State expects to have about $50,000-$60,0000 available annually for scholarships, and it plans to award almost 20 gifts of $3,000 each, said Paul Caspersen, the executive director of development in the office of gift planning.

He calls that a "tremendous" award, noting that it nearly covers a semester of tuition.

How it began

Scholarship money isn't what Fejervary originally had in mind, though.

His trust was for the building of a Home for Old Farmers of Scott County on 4 1/2 acres of land north of Davenport's Rusholme Street between Grand and Arlington avenues.

The home would provide a place to live for Scott County farmers who had been in agriculture for more than 20 years, were born in the United States, at least 60 years old and indigent, according to his will.

But even in the early years, trustees had trouble finding people who met those requirements.

In documents dated from 1902 to 1904, the trustees reported that the home had just one resident and that staffing by a matron and superintendent was "imprudent" and "extravagant."

By the 1960s, the property had been opened to other people as a nursing home, and it operated as such until 1977, when it was shut down by the Iowa Department of Health for structural noncompliance.

The original building was torn down and a new one was constructed, opening in 1979 and known most recently as Fejervary Healthcare Center.

Meanwhile, year after year, trustees filed documents stating that they had tried unsuccessfully to find - largely through the publication of notices in the Quad-City Times - people who would meet the admission standards laid out by Fejervary.

In 1996, they determined that the original purpose of the trust was "essentially impractical or impossible," so they applied to amend the purpose and beneficiary provision of the trust, and that is when payments to nonprofit groups and scholarships began.

Carriage barn.


Decision to divest

At the same time, taxes were causing trustees to question the future of the trust.

In a 16-year period from January 1979 through December 1994, for example, the trust paid $235,558 in federal and state income taxes, according to documents.

"It is clearly not the settler's intention to set aside money to pay federal and state income tax," the documents state.

Administrative costs related to the trust's investments, as well as accounting and legal services, also were taking their toll, and trustees noted in documents that those costs "may well utilize annually a substantial portion of the income and principal of the trust, thereby defeating the donor's intent."

At the end of 2009, the trust showed total assets of $1,412,871. That included $563,065 received for the sale of land that the former Fejervary Healthcare Center sits on to Skilled Healthcare Inc. of Foothill Ranch, Calif. At the same time, Skilled Healthcare also purchased the 118-unit building, which was held by a different owner, and renamed it St. Mary Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center.

Most of the Fejevary Trust money was invested in bonds, certificates of deposit, and income, money market and mutual funds.

In October 2010, the trustees filed for termination of the trust and the transfer of money to ISU. Additional monies would go toward annual gifts of $6,000 for 10 years to both Scott and Muscatine Community colleges, documents state.

Benefits yesterday, tomorrow

In this way, the generosity of a man who died more than 100 years ago will benefit the lives of people living today.

Among those who already have benefited are Andrea Engler of rural Wheatland, Iowa, and Dan Klindt, of rural Eldridge, Iowa. Both received $3,000 scholarships from the trust in 1999 to study agricultural business at Iowa State.

Engler, 31, works from her home for the Minneapolis-based Land O Lakes Finance Company, loaning money to people across the country for livestock production enterprises. She and her husband Curt also farm, growing corn, soybeans and hay while raising about 100 stock cows.

Klindt, 32, sells turf products for River City Turf in Silvis, Ill., and farms near Eldridge, raising corn and soybeans.

"I really appreciated the scholarship," he said.

Previous scholarships went to students attending other colleges and universities as well, including Kirkwood Community, Central, Black Hawk, Muscatine Community, Augustana, Wartburg, the University of Wisconsin-Platteville, the University of Iowa and St. Ambrose University.

Nonprofit groups receiving money since 1996 included the North Scott High School Vocational Agriculture Department for the benefit of FFA, Valley Shelter Homes, the Salvation Army and Friendly House.

Editor's note: Biographical information on Nicholas Fejervary in this article and the accompanying question-and-answer story is from documents in the Special Collections Room of the Davenport Public Library, including an article in the 1928 Palimpsest magazine, a tribute written by Octave Thanet, and the books, "History of Scott County Iowa" and "Biographical History and Portrait Gallery of Scott County Iowa."

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Q&A ABOUT NICHOLAS FEJERVARY

Q: Why did Nicholas Fejervary settle specifically in Davenport?

A: It's said that he wanted to avoid the commercial Eastern United States and the South's use of slavery, so came to "the West" and to Davenport, which reminded him of Hungary on the Danube River. He moved here when he was 41 years old with a wife and two children.

Q: What was his estate like?

A: He built a mansion of red brick; clay for the brick came from the site. The 21-acre estate had vineyards, an orchard, arbors and a running brook.

The estate was donated to the city in 1902 by Fejervary's daughter for use as a park. It is now about 75 acres, according to the city's website.

Initially, Fejervary's home was converted to an inn, but it was torn down in late 1933 or 1934, according to a brochure published by the now-defunct Fejervary Zoological Society, a support group. The home stood where the parking lot for the swimming pool is now.

The park has been a revolving door of attractions through the years - Monkey Island, Mother Goose Land and a zoo containing various types of animals.

Q: What was Fejervary like?

A: He was described as courtly and dignified, a gentlemen of the old school. He could read and speak English, Latin, Greek, German, Hungarian, French, Spanish, Italian and Sanskrit.

In Hungary, he had been a lawyer and a member of the legislature. It's said that when he came to Davenport, he carried "a gripsack full of gold."

Q: What happened to him and his family?

A: Fejervary died in 1895 at the age of 84 of Bright's disease, an old name for a kidney disease. He was preceded in death by his wife and teenage son. All are buried in Davenport's Oakdale Memorial Gardens. His daughter, Celestine, returned to Hungary. She did not have any descendants, according to Ferenc Beiwal, of Davenport, who researched the family history.

Q: In addition to the charitable trust that established a nursing home and now funds college scholarships, as well as the donation of his estate for a park, what other lasting impacts did Fejervary have on Davenport?

A: He was the driving force behind the raising of money for the Civil War monument on Main Street in Davenport and was described as "one of the makers of Davenport."



'via Blog this'

The Count.

The mansion.


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Celestine Fejérváry

THE HISTORY OF CELESTINE FEJÉRV�RY AND THE K�R�SZ (HER MOTHER'S) FAMILY

Mrs Fejérváry, Karolina Kárász, came from an ancient, prominent and prosperous family in Hungary. The family lived in Horgos, then in Hungary, in Yugoslavia after World War 1. Of the 14 children her parents had, only she and brother Imre survived into adulthood. Her father, intent on alleviating the devastation of the pestilence, was planning to found an orphanage, but early death prevented his plans. Karolina was going to carry out the plans, but her marriage to Nicholas Fejervary and their emigration to the US put her plans on hold. She left her daughter, Celestine Fejervary, with a legacy to carry out the plans. Karolina died in 1890 and is buried in Oakdale Cemetery in Davenport, Ia.

Celestine was born in 1848 in Budapest, Hungary. She was named after Celestine Dvornikovich, who was her father's aunt. (This aunt was like a mother to Nicholas Fejervary since his real mother died four weeks after his birth.) Celestine was the second child of the family, following the birth of Nicholas Jr. in 1847. In 1863 she became the surviving child, since Nicholas Jr. passed away that year. He fought in the Civil War on the Union side, but the circumstances of his death are unclear. He is buried with his parents in Davenport.

In her formative years Celestine attended church with her mother at St Mary's Catholic Church in West Davenport. At times she walked there with a friend, Susan Glaspell (later a Pulitzer prize winning author). In 1883 the church acquired a new organ, built by the Moline Pipe Organ Co. At the opening concert Miss Celestine Fejervary was one of the organists, probably instrumental in selecting two scores for the program by Franz Liszt, her compatriot. Celestine then became the main organist of the church.

In 1888, using her assets in Hungary, Karolina set up a foundation in her will to build an orphanage in Horgos. Following Karolina's death in 1890, Celestine carried out her mother's wishes, and deposited 91,600 florins in the foundation. The orphanage, run by an order of teaching nuns, was opened in 1898 for 20 girls.

In 1893 she visited Europe and in Belgium acquired a painting for St Mary's, still the altar piece at the church. The painting is a copy of Raphael's "Assumption of the Blessed Virgin", painted by Guido Rene, an 18th century court artist for the King of Belgium.

In 1895 Count Fejervary died, leaving a large estate for his daughter. The following year Celestine returned to Hungary, presumably to Horgos. She retained the Fejervary family's holdings in Davenport, and only in 1902 offered the family mansion and the surrounding 23 acres to the City of Davenport. We know of only one trip back to Davenport: in 1906 she returned, bringing her niece on a tour of America. That was probably the occasion when Celestine brought the Cezanne painting, Boy with the Red Vest, as a gift for Alice French, her friend. (Alice French was another accomplished local writer. She was known to have visited the White House, was a good friend of Andrew Carnegie, and others. Many details of Celestine's life come from a biography of Alice, where their correspondence is referenced.)

In 1912 Celestine added 63,00 krones and 132 acres of land to the orphanage foundation to double its size. There was space now for forty orphans and very poor girls to attend elementary school (6 to 12 years of age), and to learn home economics (12 to 16).

In 1914 the war broke out. In a letter Celestine asked Alice for help in disposing some Fejervary property. Alice agreed and also organized aid drives for Hungarian war wounded. She organized sewing and knitting groups and was instrumental in arranging the sending of supplies to Hungary by the local chapter of the American Red Cross. Still later Alice organized a Fejervary Committee to continue a program of aid. In 1915 Celestine turned the Karasz mansion in Horgos into a nursing home for wounded soldiers.

In 1917 the US entered the war, and Hungary was now an enemy. That year, the rest of the Fejervary estate was ceased by the Federal Government, as alien property. Alice opposed the seizure by organizing petitions to return the property to its rightful owner, who after all was an American citizen. With the war over, in 1921 Alice succeeded. In response to a petition with 6,000 signatures Celestine was granted $10,000 for the property seized by the Government.

The above episode is the last mention of Celestine in Alice's biography. The biography stretches to 1934, when Alice passed away. It would be reasonable to suppose that at the conclusion of the war, Celestine would move North, as Horgos and the district of Bánság (now Vojvodina) became part of Yugoslavia. She moved to Mezöberény, Hungary, and died there on Nov 4, 1937. Efforts are under way to find information about her life in that community.

Other members of the Karasz family stayed and are still living in Horgos, YA, and the surrounding area. On Oct 10, 1945 the advancing Russian troops marched into Horgos and "liberated" the village. The new communist regime confiscated the holdings of the Karasz family and the nuns were turned out of the orphanage. At first the buildings were used as soldiers' barracks. In 1949 the orphanage became a grade school. In 1966 the orphanage, still a school, was renovated and enlarged. In 1969 the Karasz mansion too was modified into classrooms. To honor the Russian liberators and the new order, the communist leadership named the school The Oktober 10 Elementary School. It was to remind the village forever of their benefactors. In 2002, the school's name remains, even though the communist influence subsided. Villagers are regaining their freedom, and are ready to part with the names and institutions imposed upon them. Some of them feel that the Fejervary-Karasz name for their elementary school would pay homage to the families who contributed so much to the history of their village and school. That is why in 2002 an email message arrived in the Davenport City Hall. It requested information about Fejervary descendents. Subsequent contact with Horgos indicated that they would like to establish contact with Davenport, perhaps on a formal or semiformal level. They intend to publish a pamphlet on the history of the Davenport – Horgos connection.

In July 2003 a package was received from Zoltan Nagygyorgy, the Horgos district historian. It contained the Karasz family tree; four beautiful postcards (color) of Horgos historic sites; three illustrated pamphlets on Horgos history, and of a colorful periodical published in Hungarian; a brochure about the local farmers COOP; articles reflecting the recent relations of the Hungarian minority with the Yugoslavian majority; and finally the book Beszelo Multunk* noted below. This book of 256 pages contains an abundance of information and illustration beside the three articles also noted below. Contents of the package will be offered to the Davenport Public Library.

Ferenc Beiwel, Davenport, 9/2/03.

SOURCES

Octave Thanet, Nicholas Fejervary in Memoria, A Tribute of Affection and Respect (Budapest, Hungary, 1898.)
George McMichael, A Journey to Obscurity, 1965 (a biography of Alice French, also known as Octave Thanet, her literary name.)
William L. Smith, ST. Mary's Church 1867 - 1967
Istvan Palatinus, A Karasz Csalad es Horgos Telepitesenek Tortenete, 1995. (About The Karasz Family and the Resettlement of Horgos)*
Ilona Karasz, A Horgosi Arvahaz es a Zarda Kronikaja, 1995.(The Story of the Horgos Orphanage and Convent)*
Imre Taborosi, Fejezetek Horgos Oktatasugyenek Tortenetebol, 1995. (Chapters from the History of Educational Institutions in Horgos)*
* All three of these works were published in Beszelo Multunk (Our Past Speaks), (Ujvidek, Yugoslavia, 1995)