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David Wu (born April 8, 1955) is an American politician who served as the U.S. representative for Oregon's 1st congressional district from 1999 to 2011. He is a member of the Democratic Party . Wu was born in Taiwan , immigrated to the United States as a child, and graduated from Stanford University .
David Wu (Cantonese: Ng Dai-Wai, simplified Chinese: 吴大维; traditional Chinese: 吳大維; pinyin: Wú Dàwéi; born Southbridge, Massachusetts, 2 October 1966), also known by the nickname Wu-Man, is a Chinese American film actor, TV personality and formerly MTV Asia and Channel V video jockey.
David Wu, first Taiwanese American U.S. Representative (D-OR) Michelle Wu , mayor of Boston [ 14 ] Tim Wu , legal scholar, official in the Biden Administration tasked with Technology and Competition policy
Pseudo Interactive was a video game developer based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and started in 1995 by David Wu, Rich Hilmer, and Daniel Posner. In 2006, the company had over fifty employees. [1] After closing, several employees formed DrinkBox Studios. Pseudo Interactive was later revived in 2021.
Dave wants his label to put out a long, offensive track as his first single; Mike and the label both disagree, and he decides to go on The Breakfast Club in New York City to leak the track. Dave finally heeds his friends' advice and decides to rap live on the show instead, earning the respect of Charlamagne tha God.
Wu (or Woo or Wou) is also the ... – Wu, David, congressman from the 1st district of Oregon; 吴虹霓 – Wu, Hongni (born 1994), Chinese mezzo-soprano opera singer;
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David Wu (born 1970) is co-founder and President of Sports Composite DE, Inc, which launched the online fantasy sports website RotoHog in February 2007. Wu and fellow founder Wharton School professor Kent Smetters develop a new way to play fantasy sports, in which team owners control the market for athletes by buying and selling athletes like stockbrokers on a trading floor.