(CBS) Bob Schieffer, interim anchor of The CBS Evening
News, is broadcast journalism's most experienced Washington reporter. He also
serves as anchor and moderator of Face The Nation, CBS News - Sunday public
affairs broadcast.
Schieffer has covered Washington for CBS News for more than 30 years and is
one of the few broadcast or print journalists to have covered all four major
beats in the nation's capital -- the White House, the Pentagon, the State
Department and Capitol Hill. He has been chief Washington correspondent since
1982 and congressional correspondent since 1989 and has covered every
presidential campaign and been a floor reporter at all of the Democratic and
Republican National Conventions since 1972. He began anchoring Face The Nation
in May 1991.
Schieffer is a member of the Broadcasting/Cable Hall of Fame and is the
recipient of the 2003 Paul White Award, presented by the Radio-Television News
Directors Association. The award recognizes an individual's lifetime
contribution to electronic journalism. Past CBS recipients include Edward R.
Murrow ('64), Morley Safer ('66), Walter Cronkite ('70, '81), Don Hewitt ('87),
Mike Wallace ('91), Charles Kuralt ('94), Dan Rather ('97) and Ed Bradley
(2000).
He has won many other broadcast journalism awards, including six Emmy Awards
and two Sigma Delta Chi Awards. Schieffer is the 2004 recipient of the
International Radio and Television Society Foundation Award and the American
News Women's Club Helen Thomas Award for Excellence in Journalism. In 2002, he
was chosen as Broadcaster of the Year by the National Press Foundation. He has
been a principal anchor for CBS News since 1973, when he was named anchor of
the CBS Sunday Night News.
In August 1996, Schieffer stepped down as anchor of the Saturday edition of
the CBS Evening News, a post he held for 20 years. He and his colleague, Dan
Rather, stand as the only two 20-year anchors of a regularly scheduled network
news broadcast.
Schieffer joined CBS News in 1969 and, after a brief stint as a general
assignment reporter, was named Pentagon correspondent, a post he held for four
years.
Before joining CBS News, he was a reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram
and, in 1965, became the first reporter from a Texas newspaper to report from
Vietnam. Schieffer later became news anchor at WBAP-TV Dallas/Fort Worth, a
post that eventually led to his joining CBS News.
He is the author of "Face The Nation: My Favorite Stories from the First 50
Years of the Award-winning News Broadcast," as well as the 2003 The New York
Times bestseller, "This Just In: What I Couldn't Tell You On TV" and "Acting
President," published in 1989.
Schieffer was born in Austin, Texas. He and his wife reside in Washington,
D.C. They have two daughters and twin granddaughters.