(b Aywaille, 23 Sept 1859; d Uccle, 1938). Belgian sculptor and medallist. He was a pupil of J. B. Jacquet (1822-88) and Eug?ne Simonis at the Acad?mie des Beaux-Arts in Brussels and in the studio of Charles Van der Stappen. In 1884 he won the Godecharle prize, using the money to visit the most important museums in Europe. He was an active participant with Les XX, exhibiting at all its salons from 1884 to 1893, and he joined its successor, La Libre Esth?tique, in 1894. In 1900 he was appointed professor of sculpture at the Acad?mie des Beaux-Arts in Mons and in 1902 at the Acad?mie Royale in Brussels.
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| Maurice DuBois | |
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DuBois and wife, Andrea, at the Metropolitan Opera 2008 opening night. |
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| Born | August 20, 1965 Long Island, New York, United States |
| Education | Northwestern University |
| Occupation | Journalist |
| Spouse | Andrea DuBois |
| Children | One son |
Maurice DuBois (born August 20, 1965) is an American television journalist.
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He was born on Long Island, New York, the son of immigrants to the U.S. from Dominica, an island nation in the Caribbean Sea.
Dubois received a Bachelor of Science degree with a major in journalism from Northwestern University, located in Evanston, Illinois.[1]
His career started in 1987, when he worked as a desk assistant at KING-TV in Seattle, Washington.[1]
Following that, DuBois served as an anchor and reporter at WFLD-TV in Chicago, Illinois, and later at KCRA-TV in Sacramento, California.[1]
He then spent seven years In New York at WNBC-TV, the East Coast flagship station of the NBC television network. While at WNBC, DuBois served as a co-anchor of Today in New York, an early-morning local news and entertainment program. During that time, he also hosted Four Stories — a television news-magazine program featuring community heroes — as well as Mind Over Media, special programming for Court-TV for students to understand media images.[1]
In addition, DuBois worked as a substitute news reader on NBC News's Today and as a substitute co-host and news reader on its weekend editions.[1]
In September 2004, DuBois joined WCBS-TV — also in New York and the East Coast flagship station of the CBS television network — as one of its anchors for the 6pm newscast, CBS 2 News at 6 with Dana Tyler.[1]. Since then, he has co-anchored CBS 2 News This Morning and CBS 2 News at Noon with Cindy Hsu and also with Mary Calvi.
In January 2011, DuBois began co-anchoring — with Kristine Johnson — CBS 2 News at 5 and CBS 2 News at 11.
He is also an occasional substitute of the weekend edition of the CBS Evening News.
In addition to covering local news, during his career DuBois has covered national political conventions; AIDS in South Africa; witnessing a double execution; the death of Pope John Paul II; and the installation of Pope Benedict XVI.[1]
He has won four Emmy Awards; been honored by the Associated Press; and received a Trailblazer Award from the New York City chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists.[1]
Dubois has received honorary Doctor of Philosophy degrees from Briarcliffe College, located in Bethpage, New York; Medgar Evers College (of the City University of New York), located in Brooklyn, New York; Seton Hall University, located in South Orange, New Jersey and St. Francis College, located in Brooklyn, NewYork.[1][3]
He is involved in various community organizations including serving on three non-profit boards — Pencil; Susan G. Komen for the Cure (New York City affiliate); and New York City Center.[1]
DuBois and his wife, Andrea DuBois, have one child, son Brandon James DuBois (born April 2, 2008); they live in Manhattan.
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