July 18, 2009
Cronkite: Trusted Guide Through History
Katie Couric Looks Back at Esteemed Newsman's Life and Career
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Play CBS Video Video Couric On Cronkite's Legacy "CBS Evening News" anchor Katie Couric discusses her predecessor, Walter Cronkite, and the long-lasting mark he left on the television journalism industry.
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Video CBS News Remembers Cronkite "60 Minutes" correspondent Lesley Stahl and former CBS News congressional correspondent Roger Mudd discuss the legacy of acclaimed newscaster, Walter Cronkite.
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Walter Cronkite, managing editor and anchor of the "CBS Evening News." (CBS)
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SPECIAL REPORT Walter Cronkite: 1916-2009 Remembering the legendary CBS newsman
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Photo Essay Man About Town After retirement, Walter Cronkite stays busy walking red carpets, receiving awards
Among the pioneers who built television news from the ground up, he forged a special bond with audiences, reports CBS News anchor Katie Couric.
He was trustworthy, plain spoke and unflappable.
Walter was there. He'd lived the history of the century and reported it. He was born in 1916 in St. Joseph, Mo., and as a young man growing up in Houston and Kansas City, he saw firsthand the dust bowl of the 1930s and the Great Depression.
Special Section: Walter Cronkite: 1916-2009
As a young wire service reporter in WWII, he hit the ground with troops in North Africa and was the first to make it back with the story.
"I'm just back from the biggest assignment that any American reporter could have so far in this war," he said.
He was all of 26 - a natural before the camera and the microphone.
In the early 1950s, television came calling. Walter anchored the news on CBS, first in Washington, then on the network from New York.
As television news began taking wing in the 1950s, so did Walter, covering the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, atom bomb testing in Nevada, and the birth of the American space program.
Walter knew 12 American presidents.
"I met all of America's presidents since Herbert Hoover," Cronkite said." And I've known some of them pretty well. Lyndon Johnson called the "CBS Evening News" while I was actually on the air. And insisted that they put him through to me on the air. My secretary said, 'But he, but he's on the air, Mr. President.' 'I don't give a damned where he is. Put him on the phone.'"
Walter assumed the anchor chair of the "CBS Evening News" in 1962.
He was there with us through America's darkest moments, including the assassination of President John Kennedy.
"And I almost lost it there," Cronkite said.
Cronkite was a fixture at political conventions, including the democrat's chaotic meeting in Chicago in 1968. A party - and a country - at war with itself over Vietnam.
Walter 's skepticism grew while reporting on the Vietnam War. He shared those feelings in a landmark broadcast in which he acknowledged he was stating his opinion that it was time the nation get out.
"And it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then, would be to negotiate," he said. "Not as victims, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy and did the best they could."
"After that report, I recall that LBJ said to many of us that if I've lost Walter Cronkite, then I've lost the war," said Tom Johnson, a former Lyndon Johnson aide.
"And I think it pained him to have to say what he thought about Vietnam, but he also understood how isolating the White House can be and how people can get to the point where they don't hear discordant voices," said former President Bill Clinton. "And he thought he knew what the truth was. And he thought he had an obligation to tell it.
But his abiding passion was space.
"I think that our conquest of space will probably be the most important story of the whole 20th century," Cronkite said.
In 1969, a waiting world held its breath as man first approached the surface of the moon.
His own spirit was unconquerable. After leaving the "Evening News" he toured well into his 80s, making documentaries and having a good time.
He spent those latter years with his true loves - his three children Nancy, Kathy and Walter Jr., and his wife of nearly 65 years, Betsy. It's said they fell asleep every night holding hands.
In 1996, he taped his thoughts on the amazing century he'd seen.
"If there's anything I've learned it is that we Americans do have a way of rising to the challenges that confront us," Cronkite said. "Just when it seems we're most divided, we suddenly show our remarkable solidarity. The 20th century may be leaving us with a host of problems, but I've also noted that it does seem darkest before the dawn. There's reason to hope for the 21st century. And that's the way it will be."
©MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 23 Commentsforeign policy. He showed the way for our present-day media talking heads to become editorial writers and cause the demise of the "reporter".
You were one of the people on my "would like to meet" list. To me you were calmness during the storm, reason during the insanity. When we lost the Kennedy's and Dr. King and all hope seemed lost, you reminded us it was not. When Apollo 13 was almost lost, you explained to us how they were going to make it back and never for a moment doubted that they would make it. You were optimism in a time of pessimism. Your loss leaves another empty hole in the world.
That is why WC is known, where else could you go to get national news and video back then. If he had to compete in today's environment he would be just another short timer.
Also, there was definitely a slant to their coverage back then, just like now. Enjoy your rating boost CBS, it won't last long.
I am sorry for his family on his passing but in terms of fair, objective journalism Cronkite was a bad actor. In helping the Vietnamese communists by campaigning for America's defeat, he showed his true stripes.
Whoa. I grew up with Cronkite, Severide, Huntley and Brinkley and do not agree with you. The nightly news we had in the sixties was objective and nonpartisan. Please offer proof of your statement.
Please realize there were only 3 network stations back then to get news from. If there were more choices no one would have watched Walter or the other clowns.
How is it that we continually recogonize and salute prople who have did everything in their power to hid the truth from the masses, and make people believe that the world is one way, when it is another.
I recall returning from Vietnam, and watching a report Ctonkite did about Vietnam, and having been there, and seen what I had, I knew that he was lying, while he smiled at the American people on the screen. It was, to say the least, sickening and disappointing.
Our news reporting services are no more than a propaganda wing of the government, always willing to prostitute themselves for the favors they receive from the powers that be.
There is a video that is available on youtube that shows Cronkite laughing about the World Federation, a world government, and at one point he says, "I am glad that I sit at the right hand of satan." link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qqTwce_ZLDw.
Now is that really someone worthy of accolades, and praise? If his wishes were met, he would have everyone of you bow down to a world governemnt controlled by rich elitest and world bankers, who have only one desire, and that is to take away the rights that you have as Americans, and replace them with a world government bent on making each and everyone of you slaves to there diabolical elitism, of which he felt he was a part.
An excellent summary of Cromkite's views can be found at: http://www.mrc.org/Profiles/cronkite/welcome.asp
MRC does not list ANY Fox "News" broadcasts or web articles in its bias sections. Ha. That pretty much exposes MRC as to its purpose.
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