Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[17] [9] Another team using the Porsche engine was the Kreepy Krauly March. South African father and son, Ferdinand and Daniel Chauvier, were introducing their pool-cleaning robot into the USA. With the money made they set up an IMSA racing team named after the machine, and based in Atlanta, Georgia.
#00 Kreepy Krauly Racing #4 Stratagraph Inc. #76 Malibu Grand Prix: Results: Sarel van der Merwe Graham Duxbury Tony Martin: Terry Labonte Billy Hagan Gene Felton Jack Baldwin Jim Cook Ira Young Bob Reed 2 Miami #04 Group 44 #47 Dingman Bros. Racing #99 All American Racers: Results: Doc Bundy Brian Redman: Walt Bohren Chris Cord: 3 Sebring #48 ...
Van der Merwe began his racing career in 1967 racing saloon cars. His international career took off in 1983 in the IMSA series in the United States, with his most notable win in the 1984 24 Hours of Daytona race driving for Kreepy Krauly Racing, an all-South African team in a March 83G-Porsche. He shared the win with Graham Duxbury and Tony Martin.
This page was last edited on 1 December 2007, at 09:04 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
For much of “Don’t Move,” Iris is drugged, unable to move or speak. The drug was a “metaphor to speak about this kind of loss and grief that she’s going through,” Kelsey Asbille tells ...
Victory overall and in the GTP class went to the No. 00 Kreepy Krauly Racing March 83G driven by Sarel van der Merwe, Graham Duxbury, and Tony Martin. [2] [3] Victory in the GTO class went to the No. 4 Statagraph/Piedmont Chevrolet Camaro driven by Billy Hagan, Terry Labonte, and Gene Felton.
A number of other sponsors became the "main" sponsor periodically during the season. In NSW-based events, the car was known as the "Statewide Roads Commodore", and in Western Australia, and South Australia, it was the "Kreepy Krauly Commodore". Everywhere else, it was again "Perkins Engineering" on the car.
Don't Move is a horror novel written by James S. Murray and Darren Wearmouth. Published in 2020 by Blackstone Publishing, the story follows a widow named Megan Forrester who embarks on a camping trip with members of a local church. After becoming stranded in a West Virginian forest, they find themselves stalked by a giant prehistoric arachnid ...