- Donald Macgregor (athlete)
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Donald Forbes Macgregor (born 23 July 1939) is a Scottish athlete, teacher and politician. He competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany, representing Great Britain in the Men's Marathon event, in which he finished in 7th position in 2:16:34.[citation needed] He also competed for Scotland in the 1970 in Edinburgh and 1974 Commonwealth Games in Christchurch NZ, and had a personal best of 2:14:15.4.[1]
Macgregor, who was born in Edinburgh, and studied at the University of St Andrews, was also chairman of the Royal Burgh of St Andrews Community Council until 2007 and served as a Liberal Democrat councillor on North East Fife District Council from 1988-1996[citation needed], and was principal teacher of German in Madras College, St Andrews from 1974[2] until 1999, when he retired from full-time teaching.[citation needed] Until 2006 he taught French and German part-time in the Business School of the University of Abertay Dundee and has also been also a German-language tour guide.
He published a book of poetry, Stars and Spikes (2004, Nutwood Press), following in the footsteps of his father Forbes, who was a more prolific author and published among many other books with a Scottish theme, including the best-selling Greyfriars Bobby - the True Story at Last. More recently Donald was involved in research for John Bryant's books 3:59.4 (2004 - Random House) and The Marathon Makers (2008 - John Blake Publishing) and in photo caption translations for German books about the 2006 World Cup and 2008 Olympic Games. He does this and other translation work for the Olympic historian Volker Kluge (Berlin/Brandenburg).
In May 2007 he was elected to Fife Council as one of the ward members for East Neuk and Landward ward(LibDem) and forms part of the Fife Council coalition administration with the Scottish National Party.
He continues to run most days and coaches middle distance athletes as a member of Fife Athletic Club. Macgregor and his former wife have 3 children.
References
- ^ Access information by conducting a search against athletes at the following site — "Commonwealth Games Federation official site". Commonwealth Games Federation. 1970 and 1974. http://www.commonwealthgames.com/. Retrieved 2007-04-21.
- ^ Arlen Pardoe; Nicholas Humfrey (2005-06-09). "Recent History of the Department". Madras College St. Andrews. Archived from the original on 2007-10-06. http://web.archive.org/web/20071006134828/http://www.madras.fife.sch.uk/modernlanguages/historydept.html. Retrieved 2007-04-22.
In 2010 he published an autobiography, Running My Life (Pinetree Press, St Andrews).
Categories:- 1939 births
- Living people
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1972 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1976 Summer Olympics
- Scottish athletes
- British long-distance runners
- Academics of the University of Abertay Dundee
- Sportspeople from Edinburgh
- Olympic athletes of Great Britain
- Scottish Liberal Democrat politicians
- Councillors in Scotland
- People educated at Stewart's Melville College
- Scottish sportspeople stubs
- Scottish politician stubs
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