Daniel Louis Schorr

statut:
le genre:
masculin
Nom de naissance:
Not known
Appelé:
-
Alias:
-
Date de naissance:
31. August 1916
Lieu de naissance:
Domicile:
Not known
Lieu du dommage survenu:
Not known
Date de décès:
23. Juli 2010
Décédé(e) à:
Numéro de dossier LEA:
Conjoint:
Date et lieu de mariage:
Not known
Mère:
Not known
Père:
Not known
Frères et sœurs:
Not known
Enfants:
*En raison de dispositions légales, les données du conjoint ne seront pas divulguées

Vita

(W) Fernsehjournalist
(RS) Burial: 25 Jul 2010 2850 Quebec St, NW, Washington, DC 20008, Rockville, MD.
(W) Daniel Louis Schorr (August 31, 1916 – July 23, 2010) was an American journalist who covered world news for more than 60 years. He was most recently a Senior News Analyst for National Public Radio (NPR). Schorr won three Emmy Awards for his television journalism.
Schorr was born in the Bronx, New York, the son of Russian immigrants Tillie Godiner and Gedaliah Tchornemoretz. He began his journalism career at the age of 13, when he came upon a woman who had jumped or fallen from the roof of his apartment building. After calling the police, he phoned the Bronx Home News and was paid $5 for his information.
He attended DeWitt Clinton High School in the West Bronx, where he worked on the Clinton News, the school paper. He graduated from City College of New York in 1939 while working for the Jewish Daily Bulletin. Schorr also worked for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency as a chief news editor from 1934 to 1948. During World War II, Schorr served in Army Intelligence at Fort Polk, Louisiana, and at Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
In January 1967, he married Lisbeth Bamberger, a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley.
Following several years as a stringer, in 1953 he joined CBS News as one of the recruits of Edward R. Murrow (becoming part of the later generation of Murrow's Boys). In 1955, with the post-Stalin thaw in the Soviet Union, he received accreditation to open a CBS bureau in Moscow. In June 1957, he obtained an exclusive interview with Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet Communist Party chief. It aired on CBS's Face the Nation, Schorr's first television interview. Schorr left the Soviet Union later that year, because of Soviet censorship laws. When he applied for a new visa, it was denied by the Soviets.
In January 1962, he aired the first examination of everyday life under communism in East Germany, The Land Beyond the Wall: Three Weeks in a German City, which The New York Times called a "journalistic coup". (...)
In 1977, Schorr was hired by Reese Schonfeld as a White House correspondent for ITNA (Independent Television News Association), a news agency serving independent television news stations in the U.S. In 1979, Schonfeld and Ted Turner brought Schorr to Cable News Network (CNN), where he was the first on-camera employee hired. (...)
Schorr became friends with composer Frank Zappa. (...)
Q: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Schorr#Other
s.a. https://www.nytimes.com/1976/02/27/archives/controversial-reporter-daniel-louis-schorr.html

Remarques

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