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(CBS) Rather is the Anchor and Managing
Editor of the CBS Evening News and
Correspondent for 60 Minutes II.
Since 1962, when Dan Rather first
joined CBS News, he has handled some
of the most challenging assignments
in journalism. His day-to-day commitment
to substantive, fair and accurate
news reporting and his tough, active
style have earned him a position of
respect among his peers and the public.
Often referred to as "the hardest
working man in broadcast journalism,"
Rather lives up to the description,
immersed in two major broadcasts,
the CBS Evening News and 60 Minutes
II. His recently published seventh
book, The American Dream, chronicles
the stories of a wide cross-section
of Americans, describing how they
achieved their versions of the American
dream.
In 2002 and 2003, the war on terrorism
has taken him to Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan,
Saudi Arabia and Israel. In February
2003, Rather secured the most sought-after
interview in the world: an exclusive
one-on-one with Saddam Hussein in
Baghdad, the first the Iraqi leader
has conducted with an American journalist
since 1991. Rather also reported from
Kabul on the United States’
effort to oust the Taliban and from
Jerusalem and the West Bank during
the largest Israeli military action
in two decades. He gained special
notice for his live anchoring of CBS
News’ coverage of the Sept.
11 attacks and his around-the-clock
reporting in the days that followed.
In the weeks after 9/11, Rather filed
reports from Ground Zero and on the
attacks’ aftermath in New York
and the nation for the prime time
news magazine 48 Hours.
In 2000 Rather traveled to Moscow
to cover the Russian elections and
then to Israel as the peace process
there took a turn for the worse. Later
in the year, he anchored Election
Night 2000, a marathon that kept him
on the air continuously from 6:00
PM on Tuesday, Nov. 7, to 10:00 AM
on Wednesday, Nov. 8. During the time
that the presidential race was undecided,
Rather interviewed both candidates
on how each felt about the stalemate
in Florida. At the end of the year,
Rather was the first anchor to be
granted President Clinton's exit interview
as he prepared to leave the White
House.
In addition to reporting on major
events, ranging from the Pope's visit
to Cuba in January 1998 through the
Monica Lewinsky scandal to the impeachment
of President Clinton by the House
of Representatives in February 1999,
Rather was on the scene in New Orleans
when Hurricane George struck the Gulf
Coast in September 1998.
As a full-time correspondent for
60 Minutes II, Rather secured an exclusive
interview with President Clinton (March
31, 1999), Clinton's first sit-down
interview following the Lewinsky scandal
and his impeachment by the House.
Rather was the first U.S. anchor on
the scene in Belgrade in the middle
of NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia, reporting
for several CBS News broadcasts, including
the CBS Evening News.
In May of 1997, Rather returned to
his roots in two ways: he conducted
a rare interview with playwright Horton
Foote, a fellow native of Wharton,
Texas, for CBS News Sunday Morning,
and he launched a syndicated weekly
newspaper column, "Part of Our
World"—now “Dan Rather
Reporting” —harking back
to his early days in journalism as
a print reporter. In June of that
year, Rather traveled to Hong Kong
to anchor CBS News' coverage of the
colony's turnover to Chinese rule,
after traveling by train deep into
the Chinese heartland of boomtowns
and rice paddies, recalling his previous
reports from China on events ranging
from President Richard M. Nixon's
historic visit in 1972 to the pro-democracy
demonstrations in Tiananmen Square
in 1989. On a more personal note,
August 1997 saw the dedication of
Rather's birthplace as part of the
Wharton County Historical Museum.
Rather made two trips to the front
lines in Bosnia in 1995, reporting
on American peacekeeping troops. He
first reported from the region a quarter
of a century earlier and has had unparalleled
access to political and military leaders,
as well as the innocent civilians
caught in the crossfire. October 1995
found Rather literally once more in
the eye of a storm, reporting on Hurricane
Opal as it approached the Florida
shore while two producers "anchored
the anchor," clinging to his
arms and legs during the ferociously
high winds. In November of that year,
he reported on the assassination of
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
from Jerusalem and was the only American
anchor at Rabin's funeral. Also in
1995, he covered the 50th anniversary
of V-E Day from London and made incisive
contributions to four "CBS Reports"
documentaries: "In the Killing
Fields of America," "Victory
in Japan," with retired Gen.
H. Norman Schwarzkopf, "The Religious
Right" and "The Gulf War
+ 5."
Rather began 1994 with a trip to
Eastern Europe for reports on the
rise of neo-fascism in the former
Soviet Bloc, on the civil war in the
Georgian Republic and on President
Clinton's first Russian summit. He
spent most of April in South Africa,
covering that country's first attempt
at true democracy and interviewing
candidates of all the major parties
in the elections. He went to the Middle
East just before the Palestinians
moved into Gaza and the West Bank,
and conducted interviews with Palestinian
leader Yasir Arafat and Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak. His reporting from
Haiti was perhaps Rather's most memorable
of the year. The only network anchor
on the scene before and during the
crisis, he obtained several exclusive
interviews with Haiti's military leader,
Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras. He has interviewed
every United States president since
Dwight D. Eisenhower and virtually
every major international leader of
the past 30 years. In 1990, he was
the first American journalist to interview
Saddam Hussein after Iraq's invasion
of Kuwait.
In October 1994, Rather was honored
by his alma mater, Sam Houston State
University in Huntsville, Texas, which
named its journalism and communications
building after him.
Rather is a prolific writer. In addition
to The American Dream, he is the author
of Deadlines and Datelines, published
in 1999, The Camera Never Blinks Twice:
The Further Adventures of a Television
Journalist (1994), I Remember (1991),
The Camera Never Blinks (1977) and
The Palace Guard (1974). He also abridged
Mark Sullivan's landmark popular history,
Our Times: America at the Dawn of
the Twentieth Century. He continues
to be a much-sought-after contributor
to many of the top newspapers and
magazines in the country and speaks
out frequently on journalistic ethics.
Since the start of his career in
1950, Rather has been in the middle
of the world's defining moments. From
Nov. 22, 1963 in Dallas, when he kept
the American people informed of the
details of the assassination of John
F. Kennedy, to Beijing, Bosnia, Haiti
and Hong Kong decades later, he has
covered most of the world's major
news stories. His reporting on the
civil rights movement in the South,
the White House, the wars in Vietnam,
Afghanistan, the Persian Gulf and
Yugoslavia and the quest for peace
in South Africa and the Middle East
has showcased his combination of street
smarts and astute analysis.
He has received virtually every honor
in broadcast journalism, including
numerous Emmy Awards, a Peabody Award
and citations from critical, scholarly,
professional and charitable organizations.
He is regularly cited as "best
anchor" in opinion surveys. During
his 35 years with CBS News, Rather
has held many prestigious positions,
ranging from co-editor of 60 Minutes
to anchor of "CBS Reports"
and anchor of the weekend and weeknight
editions of the CBS Evening News.
He has served as CBS News bureau chief
in London and Saigon and was the White
House correspondent during the Johnson
and Nixon administrations.
Since March 9, 1981, Rather has served
as anchor and managing editor of the
CBS Evening News. He anchored and
reported for 48 Hours from its premiere
on Jan. 19, 1988, through September
2002. His regular contributions to
CBS News Radio include "Dan Rather
Reporting," a weekday broadcast
of news and analysis, which has been
presented on the CBS Radio Network
since March 9, 1981.
Rather joined CBS News in 1962 as
chief of its Southwest bureau in Dallas.
In 1963, he was appointed chief of
the Southern bureau in New Orleans,
responsible for coverage of news events
in the South, Southwest, Mexico and
Central America. During that time,
he reported on racial conflicts in
the South and the crusade of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., as well as the death
of President Kennedy. Rather began
his career in journalism in 1950 as
an Associated Press reporter in Huntsville,
Texas. Later, he was a reporter for
United Press International (1950-52),
KSAM Radio in Huntsville (1950-53),
KTRH Radio in Houston and the Houston
Chronicle (1954-55). He became news
director of KTRH in 1956 and a reporter
for KTRK-TV Houston in 1959. Prior
to joining CBS News, Rather was news
director at KHOU-TV, the CBS affiliate
in Houston.
He was born Oct. 31, 1931 in Wharton,
Texas. In 1953, he received a bachelor's
degree in journalism from Sam Houston
State Teachers College, where he spent
the following year as a journalism
instructor. He also attended the University
of Houston and the South Texas School
of Law.
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