

Contact: Marlene Adler
Tel: (212) 975 3627
Fax: (212) 975-1509
WALTER CRONKITE
Walter Cronkite has covered virtually every news event during his more than 60 years
in journalism - the last 50 affiliated with CBS News. He became
a special correspondent for CBS News when he stepped down on March ,
1981 after 19 years as anchorman and managing editor of the CBS
Evening News. Affectionately nicknamed "Old Iron
Pants" for his unflappability under pressure, Mr. Cronkite's
accomplishments -- both on-air and off -- have won him acclaim and
trust from journalism colleagues and the American public alike.
Born in St. Joseph, Missouri on November 4, 1916, Mr. Cronkite began his
career in journalism as a campus correspondent at The Houston Post
during high school and his freshman year at college. He also
worked as a sports announcer for a local radio station in Oklahoma
City and joined the United Press in 1937, where he remained for
eleven years.
It was as a United Press correspondent that Mr.
Cronkite covered World War II -- landing with the invading Allied
troops in North Africa, covering the battle of the North Atlantic in
1942, taking part in the Normandy beachhead assaults in 1944 and
participating as one of the first newsmen in B-17 raids over Germany.
After reporting the German surrender, Mr. Cronkite established
United Press bureaus in Europe, was named United Press bureau chief
in Brussels and covered the Nuremberg trials of Goering, Hess and
other top Nazis. From 1946 to 1948 he was chief correspondent
for United Press in Moscow.
In July 1950, Mr. Cronkite joined
CBS News in Washington as a correspondent and was anchorman for their
political convention and election coverage from 1952 to 1980. He
assumed his duties on the CBS Evening News on April 16, 1962,
which began as a fifteen-minute broadcast. On September 2,
1963, it debuted as network television's first half-hour, weeknight
news broadcast with Mr. Cronkite's headline-making interview with
President John F. Kennedy.
Following his departure on March 6,
1981, from the CBS Evening News, Mr. Cronkite hosted several
acclaimed CBS documentary programs, including the Emmy-winning
Children of Apartheid and the CBS News science magazine series
Walter Cronkite's Universe. In 1985, Mr. Cronkite was
inducted into the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Hall of
Fame.
Mr. Cronkite was the only journalist to be voted among
the top ten "most influential decision-makers in America"
in surveys conducted by U.S. News and World Report and also was named
the "most influential person" in broadcasting.
In a nationwide
viewer opinion survey conducted as recently as 1995, more than a
decade after leaving the CBS anchor desk, he again was voted "Most
Trusted Man in Television News."
As an avid sailor of his
then 48-foot yacht, "Wyntje", Mr. Cronkite recorded his
experiences sailing waterways from the Chesapeake Bay to Key West in
his book South by Southeast (Oxmoor House, 1983), with
paintings by artist, Ray Ellis, accompanying his text. Other
collaborations with Mr. Ellis resulted in North by Northeast
(Oxmoor House, 1986), which covered his trips sailing the northeast
coastal waterways, and in Westwind (Oxmoor House, 1990) he
recounted his sailing tour of America's West Coast. His most
recent sailing book, Around America, was published in August
2001 (W.W. Norton). Mr. Cronkite's first book, Eye on the
World (Cowles, 1971) is an edited compendium of CBS News'
reporting on the major trends and stories of 1970, for which he
provided analysis and commentary.
In addition to his ongoing
assignments as a special correspondent for CBS, Mr. Cronkite
maintains a demanding, international lecture and public appearance
schedule and also hosts many public affairs and cultural programs.
In 1993 he co-founded The Cronkite Ward Company, which has
produced more than 60 award-winning documentary hours for The
Discovery Channel, PBS and other networks.
In 1996, Mr.
Cronkite's production company, in collaboration with CBS and The
Discovery Channel, produced his memoirs entitled Cronkite
Remembers. The two-hour CBS special aired in May of that
year, and the eight-hour series premiered later on The Discovery
Channel. Also in 1996, Mr. Cronkite completed his
autobiography, A Reporter's Life, published by Knopf.
Mr.
Cronkite and his wife of 62 years live in New York City.
May, 2002