woo fame - traduction vers allemand
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woo fame - traduction vers allemand

AMERICAN JOURNALIST (1936-2006)
Bill Woo; Woo, William

woo fame      
rennen nach Ruhm
Hollywood Walk of Fame         
  • Trump's star under repair, soon after it was vandalized on July 25, 2018
  • ''Hollywood and La Brea Gateway'' at the Walk of Fame's west end
  • silent film actor of the same name]] has an identical star in a different location on Hollywood Boulevard
  • Hollywood Boulevard, 7000 block, north side, looking westward
  • One of the four monuments recognizing the Apollo 11 astronauts at the corners of Hollywood and Vine
  • The Walk of Fame at the 6800 block of Hollywood Boulevard, looking eastward. The Dolby Theatre is in the foreground at left. In the upper left quadrant is the famous intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Highland Avenue.
  • Woodward's star, contrary to popular belief, was not the first.
  • Director [[James Cameron]] unveiling his star, 2009
  • Johnny Grant, center, at producer [[Joe Pasternak]]'s presentation ceremony in 1991. At left is [[Gene Kelly]].
  • Actor [[Matt Damon]]'s star under construction, August 2007
  • his death]] in 2009
  • "Motion Picture" category, "TV" emblem
  • Mickey Mouse's star was the first awarded to an animated character.
  • alt=Circular 4-inch brass plaque showing a side view of a classic movie camera.
  • alt=Circular 4-inch brass plaque with an antique studio-style microphone.
  • alt=Circular 4-inch brass plaque with a top view of phonograph disc and pickup arm.
  • alt=Circular 4-inch brass plaque with a tube-type television with twin aerials.
  • alt=Circular 4-inch brass plaque with the classic theatrical comedy/tragedy masks.
MORE THAN 2,700 FIVE-POINTED TERRAZZO AND BRASS STARS EMBEDDED IN THE SIDEWALKS ALONG 15 BLOCKS OF HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD AND THREE BLOCKS OF VINE STREET IN HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA
Hollywood's Walk of Fame; Hollywoods Walk of Fame; Hollywood Walk Of Fame; Hollywood Historic Trust; Hollywood walk of fame; HWOF; The Hollywood Walk of Fame; Hollywood Walk of Fame Awards; Walkoffame.com; Hollywood Chamber of Commerce
Hollywood Walk of Fame, Bürgersteig in Hollywood Kalifornien (USA) auf dem Sterne mit den Namen von Berühmtheiten eingraviert sind
Hall of Fame Classic         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Hall of Fame Classic (disambiguation)
n. klassische Kunstwerke oder Menschen die in der "Hall of Fame" geehrt werden (für außerordentlicher sportliche Leistungen z.B.)

Définition

woo
¦ verb (woos, wooing, wooed)
1. try to gain the love of (a woman).
2. seek the support or custom of.
Derivatives
wooable adjective
wooer noun
Origin
OE wogian, awogian, of unknown origin.

Wikipédia

William Woo

William Franklin Woo (吳惠連, pinyin: Wú Huìlián, b. October 4, 1936 - d. April 12, 2006) was the first Chinese American to become editor of a major U.S. daily newspaper.

Woo was born in Shanghai to Kyatang Woo and American Elizabeth Hart, who met in the early '30s as graduate students at the University of Missouri School of Journalism. His parents divorced after World War II, and Woo and his mother moved to the United States in 1946 and settled in Kansas City, Missouri with her adoptive father.

Woo attended the University of Kansas and joined The Kansas City Times in 1957. From 1962 to 1996, Woo held a variety of posts at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, founded by Joseph Pulitzer. In 1986, Woo became the first chief editor of the paper who was not named Joseph Pulitzer (there had been three). Joseph Pulitzer Jr., who had been Woo's mentor, died in 1995, and his half-brother, Michael Pulitzer, took over leadership of the company. In July 1996, Woo resigned under pressure to provide more bottom line- oriented leadership.

In September 1996, Woo became the Lorry I. Lokey visiting professor of professional journalism at Stanford University, a post he held until his death. He was a member of the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors from 1997 to 2003. Since 1999, he had also served as a visiting professor at the University of Hong Kong. When he died he was interim director of Stanford's Graduate Program in Journalism.

Woo was married three times, to Sonia Flournoy, Tricia Ernst Woo, and Martha Shirk. He and his wife, Martha Shirk, a former Post-Dispatch reporter and author of four books, were the parents of three sons (Thomas Woo of San Francisco, California; and Bennett Woo and Peter Woo, both of Palo Alto). Woo often wrote about his children in a column that appeared in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch from 1986 through his retirement.

Besides leaving behind wife Martha, he also left behind two half brothers (Robert C. Woo of St. Louis and John Woo of New York City); stepbrother Willie Woo of New York; half-sister Wendy Woo of San Mateo, California; and stepsister Elizabeth Li of Hong Kong.

Woo died of colon cancer at home in Palo Alto, California.

In 2007, the University of Missouri Press published "Letters from the Editor: Lessons from Journalism and Life," a collection of weekly letters that Woo wrote to his Stanford students about the craft of journalism. In his introduction, Philip Meyer, the editor, wrote: "The career of William F. Woo tracked what many of our generation once considered the golden age of newspaper journalism... For the students and journalists of the 21st Century, Bill Woo's platform is a reminder of the values worth preserving."