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Bob Schieffer : ウィキペディア英語版 | Bob Schieffer
Bob Lloyd Schieffer (born February 25, 1937) is an American television journalist who has been with CBS News since 1969, serving as anchor on the Saturday edition of ''CBS Evening News'' for 23 years, from 1973 to 1996, as well as chief Washington correspondent since 1982 and moderator of the Sunday public affairs show ''Face the Nation'' since 1991. From March 2005 to August 31, 2006, Schieffer was interim weekday anchor of the ''CBS Evening News'' and was subsequently one of the primary substitutes for Katie Couric and Scott Pelley. Schieffer is one of the few journalists to have covered all four of the major Washington national assignments: the White House, the Pentagon, United States Department of State, and United States Congress. His career with CBS has almost exclusively dealt with national politics. On October 13, 2004, he was the moderator of the third presidential debate between President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry in Tempe, Arizona. On October 15, 2008, Schieffer moderated the third presidential debate between Senator Barack Obama and Senator John McCain. Schieffer also moderated the third debate of the presidential candidates in 2012, between President Obama and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, on October 22 in Boca Raton, Florida. ==Youth== Schieffer was born on February 25, 1937, in Austin, Texas, to the late John Emmitt Schieffer and the former Gladys Payne, and grew up in Fort Worth, Texas. He is an alumnus of North Side High School, and Texas Christian University (TCU), where he was a member of the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps〔http://www.af.mil/News/ArticleDisplay/tabid/223/Article/131267/cbs-news-anchor-proud-of-air-force-past.aspx〕 and the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. The College of Communication at TCU was later named after him. After graduating from TCU, he served in the U.S. Air Force as a public information officer stationed at Travis Air Force Base and later McChord Air Force Base.〔''This Just In: What I Couldn't Tell You on TV'' by Bob Schieffer〕 He was honorably discharged and joined the ''Fort Worth Star-Telegram'' as a reporter, with one of his key assignments a trip to Vietnam to profile soldiers from the Fort Worth area. At the ''Star Telegram'' he received his first major journalistic recognition on November 22, 1963. Shortly after President Kennedy was shot in Dallas, while in the ''Star-Telegram'' office, he received a telephone call from a woman in search of a ride to Dallas. The woman was Marguerite Oswald, Lee Harvey Oswald's mother, whom he accompanied to the Dallas police station. He then spent the next several hours there pretending to be a detective, enabling him to have access to an office with a phone. In the company of Oswald's mother Marguerite and his wife, Marina, he was able to use the phone to call in dispatches from other ''Star-Telegram'' reporters in the building. This enabled the ''Star Telegram'' to create four "Extra" editions on the day of the assassination. Schieffer later joined the ''Star-Telegrams television station, WBAP-TV in Fort Worth before taking a job with CBS in 1969.
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