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Bradley Darryl Wong [1] was born on October 24, 1960, [2] and raised in San Francisco, California, to Roberta Christine Wong (née Leong), a telephone-company supervisor, and William D. Wong, a postal worker. He has one older brother and one younger brother. [3]
Willie Wong (traditional Chinese: 黃顯護; simplified Chinese: 黄显护; pinyin: Huáng Xiǎnhù; Jyutping: Wong 4 Hin 2 wu 6) [3] (1927–2005) was an American basketball player who was born and raised in Chinatown, San Francisco. Though Wong was only 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) tall, he excelled, and was known as one of the finest Chinese American ...
"San Francisco, California. Many children of Japanese ancestry attended Raphael Weill public School, Geary and Buchanan Streets, prior to evacuation. This scene shows first- graders during flag pledge ceremony. Evacuees of Japanese ancestry will be housed in War Relocation Authority centers for the duration. Provision will be effected for the ...
United States Navy training facility, San Diego, California; Wadsworth General Hospital, Veteran's Administration, Los Angeles; Western Hydraulics Plant 2, Van Nuys, California; William H. Block Department Store, Indianapolis; WSBT Television Station, South Bend, Indiana; Marineland of the Pacific, Rancho Palos Verdes, California [3]
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Wong was born in San Francisco to an accountant mother and insurance salesman father. [5] She is a third-generation Chinese American. [5] Her grandmother immigrated to the United States from Guang Mei Cun, a village near Kaiping county, in the 1930s. [6] Wong attended an all-girls Catholic high school, where she took speech class. [7]
Caroline Wong was born in San Francisco in 1983. [9] Her mother studied microbiology in school and her uncles run their own engineering firms. She later received a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering and computer science from UC Berkeley and holds a certificate in finance and accounting from Stanford University Graduate School of Business. [10]
One of the bodies resembles Jesus, another is of a woman holding an apple, evoking Eve. Both symbolize the connection between Jews and Christians . The only standing man, a survivor, is thought to be the sculptor's representation of Margaret Bourke-White 's famous Life Magazine 1945 photograph of the liberation of Buchenwald . [ 2 ]