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・ Ferdinand Schiess
・ Ferdinand Schjelderup
・ Ferdinand Schladen
・ Ferdinand Schlatter
・ Ferdinand Schmitz
・ Ferdinand Schmutzer
・ Ferdinand Schneider
・ Ferdinand Schubert
・ Ferdinand Schumacher
・ Ferdinand Schumann-Heink
・ Ferdinand Schureman Schenck
・ Ferdinand Schörner
・ Ferdinand Seymour, Earl St. Maur
・ Ferdinand Siegert
・ Ferdinand Sigg
Ferdinand Simoneit
・ Ferdinand Sinaga
・ Ferdinand Sorenson
・ Ferdinand Stadler
・ Ferdinand State Forest
・ Ferdinand Steck Maschinenfabrik
・ Ferdinand Steiner
・ Ferdinand Steininger
・ Ferdinand Steinmeyer
・ Ferdinand Steinvorth
・ Ferdinand Stipberger
・ Ferdinand Stoliczka
・ Ferdinand Stone
・ Ferdinand Swatosch
・ Ferdinand T. Yahr


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Ferdinand Simoneit : ウィキペディア英語版
Ferdinand Simoneit
Ferdinand Simoneit (June 14, 1925; Duisburg – April 3, 2010; Löffingen) was a German journalist, author, professor and World War II veteran.
==Life==
During the German invasion of the Soviet Union he was a ''Panzersoldat'' and seriously wounded on the Eastern Front. As a prisoner of war in the Soviet Union he later came into British internment. After the war he was a port and construction worker and studied architecture in Duisburg. As a journalist he was the rapporteur from Moscow and New Delhi. In 1953, he undertook a journalism apprenticeship at the ''Rheinische Post''.
In 1955, working for ''Der Spiegel'', Simoneit was the first German journalist to visit the People's Republic of China, at the same time becoming the magazine's travel correspondent for the entire East. During his time with Der Spiegel he also had more than 25 cover stories to his credit as well as interviews with Heinrich Nordhoff, SPD politician Georg Leber, Nikita Khrushchev, Walter Ulbricht and Henry Ford II. A highlight of his career as an author came in 1966/67 with his second book, Die neuen Bosse, which for two weeks occupied top position of the Der Spiegel best sellers' list.
From 1971 to 1974 he was chief editor of the business magazine Capital. In 1975, he became a board member and editorial director with the ''Motor Presse Stuttgart'' and founded several magazines (including ""Motor Klassik"). Between 1975 and 1982 he edited the company's leading magazine, Auto, Motor und Sport which successfully broadened its scope under his direction and had, by 1985, increased its sales to 522,045 copies.〔(Auflagen der Publikumszeitschriften (IVW) ) bei pz-online.de〕 From 1978 he was a lecturer in journalism at the University of Hohenheim and in 1988 professor of the University of Hohenheim and chief editor of the Hohenheim environmental journal. He was also the founder and first director of the Georg von Holtzbrinck school for business journalists in Düsseldorf and leading member of the media academy in Stuttgart. He also was a lecturer in journalism at the University of Passau, teacher of the volunteers of the ZDF in Mainz, journalism adviser for DaimlerChrysler, Laser-Leibinger, Dekra, Vogel-Verlag and Gong-Verlag, advisory board member of Mercedes Group magazine, career advisor for the student organization AIESEC and several other positions. He also was European correspondent for the South American news magazines ''Progress''. In 1995, he was the ''laudator'' at the World Press Photo Award.

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