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SCHORR, DANIEL
 Daniel Schorr Photo courtesy of National Public Radio DANIEL
SCHORR. Born in New York City, U.S.A., 31 August 1916. Educated
at the College of the City of New York, B.S., 1939. Married: Lisbeth
Bamberger, 1967; children: Jonathan and Lisa. Served in U.S. Army,
stationed at Camp Polk, Louisiana and at Fort Sam Houston, Texas,
1943-45. Worked as a stringer for the Bronx Home News, the Jewish
Daily Bulletin, and several metropolitan dailies, 1930s; assistant
editor, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 1939; worked for the New York
Journal-American, 1940; New York news editor, ANETA (Dutch news
agency), 1941-43, 1945-48; freelance journalist, 1948-53; Washington
correspondent and special assignments, CBS News, Latin America and
Europe, 1953-55; reopened CBS Moscow Bureau, 1955; roving assignments,
United States and Europe, 1958-60; chief, CBS News Bureau, Germany,
Central Europe, 1960-66; CBS News Washington correspondent, 1966-76;
Regents professor, University of California at Berkeley, 1977; columnist,
Des Moines Register-Tribune Syndicate, 1977-80; senior Washington
correspondent, CNN, 1980-85; senior analyst, National Public Radio
since 1985. Member: American Federation of Radio-TV Artists; New
York City Council on Foreign Relations. Recipient: Emmy Awards,
1972-74; Peabody award for lifetime of uncompromising reporting
of highest integrity, 1992; inducted into the Society of Professional
Journalists Hall of Fame, 1991.
RADIO
National
Public Radio shows, from 1985
PUBLICATIONS
Don't
Get Sick In America! Nashville: Aurora Publishers, 1977.
Clearing
the Air. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977.
"Introduction."
Taking the Stand: The Testimony of Lieutenant Colonel Oliver L.
North. New York: Pocket, 1987.
U.S. Broadcast
Journalist
Daniel
Schorr is an American television newsman whose aggressive investigative
style of reporting made him, at various times in his career, the
bane of the KGB, presidents from Dwight D.Eisenhower to Gerald Ford,
CIA chiefs, television executives, and his fellow TV newsmen and
women. In l976 he, himself, became "the story" when he published
a previously suppressed congressional report on CIA assassinations.
Schorr
was born and brought up in New York City and did his apprenticeship
in print journalism on his high school, and college newspapers.
During his college years he also worked on a number of small New
York City papers, among them, the New York Journal-American.
Drafted in World War II he served in Army Intelligence. Following
the war he became a stringer for a number of U.S. newspapers and
the Dutch News agency ANETA. His radio reports on the floods in
Holland brought him to the attention of Edward R. Murrow, who hired
him for CBS News in l953.
In l955 Schorr was assigned to open the first CBS bureau in Moscow
since l947. His refusal to cooperate with Soviet censors soon earned
him their disapproval, and when he returned home for a brief period
at the end of l957 the Soviets refused to permit him to return.
For the next few years Schorr was a roving diplomatic correspondent.
In l959 his reporting provoked the first in a long series of incidents
that aroused the ire of various presidents. Schorr's report of the
impending resignation of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles so
irked President Eisenhower that he denied the report, only to have
it confirmed by his press secretary a week later.
During
the Kennedy administration the President asked CBS to transfer Schorr,
then CBS's correspondent in West Germany, because he felt Schorr's
interpretations of American policy were pro-German. During the l964
election, Schorr's report that the Republican nominee Senator Barry
Goldwater had formed an alliance with certain right-wing German
politicians and was thinking of spending some time at Adolf Hitler's
famous Berchtesgaden retreat caused a furor, and Schorr was ordered
to make a "clarification."
In l966 Schorr returned to the United States without a formal assignment.
He created his own beat, however, by investigating the promise and
the reality of the "Great Society" for the CBS Evening News. In
this role he turned in excellent reports on poverty, education,
pollution, and health care. His interest in health care led to a
provocative l970 contribution to the documentary series,CBS Reports.
The program, "Don't Get Sick in America," appeared as a book that
same year from Aurora Publishers.
Schorr's
muckraking reporting during the Nixon administration earned him
a prominent place on Nixon's so-called "enemies list." In addition,
his subsequent reporting on the "Watergate scandal" garnered him
Emmy's for outstanding achievement within a regularly scheduled
news program in l972, 1973 and 1974.
Following
Nixon's resignation Schorr was assigned to cover stories involving
possible criminal CIA activities at home and abroad. Schorr soon
achieved a scoop based upon on a tip he received about an admission
by President Ford regarding CIA assassination attempts. The comment
had come in an off-the-record conversation with the editors of the
New York Times. Schorr's report forced the Rockefeller commission
investigating the CIA to broaden its inquiry, and prompted an exclamation
from former CIA chief Richard Helms referring to him as "Killer
Schorr."
Commenting
on his journalistic method, more akin to print journalism than conventional
television journalism, Schorr has said, "My typical way of operating
is not to stick a camera and a microphone in somebody's face and
let him say whatever self-serving thing he wants to say, but to
spend a certain amount of time getting the basic information, as
though I was going to write a newspaper story.... [I] may end up
putting a mike in somebody's face, but it is usually for the final
and hopefully embarassing question."
Soon
after making these remarks, Schorr found himself at the center of
a huge controversy involving both journalistic ethics and constitutional
issues. Schorr came into possession of the Pike Congressional Committee's
report on illegal CIA and FBI activities. Congress, however, had
voted not to make the report public. In hopes of being able to publish
the report Schorr contacted Clay Felker of the Village Voice,
who agreed to pay him for it and to publish it. To Schorr's suprise,
instead of supporting him, many of his colleagues and editorialists
around the country excoriated him for selling the document. Making
matters worse was Schorr's initial reaction, which was to shift
suspicion from himself as the person who leaked the documents to
his CBS colleague Leslie Stahl.
Schorr managed to turn opinion around when, after being subpoened
to appear before a House Ethics committee, he eloquently defended
himself on the grounds that he would not reveal a source. While
this put off the congressional bloodhounds it certainly didn't satisfy
some of the wolves at CBS, among whom was Chairman William S.Paley,
who wanted Schorr fired. Schorr and CBS News executives resisted
until the story of the internal dissension over Schorr's conduct
broke during an interview he did with Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes.
As a result Schorr resigned from CBS News in September of l976.
A year later he wrote about it all in his autobiographical account,
Clearing the Air.
Subsequently
Schorr toured on the lecture circuit, taught journalism courses,
and wrote a syndicated newspaper column. In l979 hoping to give
his new Cable News Network instant journalistic credibility, Ted
Turner hired Schorr as a commentator. However, in l985 CNN refused
to renew his contract. Schorr commented at the time that he had
been "forced out" because, "They wanted to be a rid of what they
considered a loose cannon." Since l985 Schorr has been a Senior
News Analyst for National Public Radio. His reporting and commentary
are heard on All Things Considered and Weekend Edition.
Schorr
represents the traditions of investigative print journalism transfered
to the world of TV reporting. His work, though it has sometimes
over-stepped boundries, is in vivid contrast to the often image-conscious
attitudes of contemporary TV news.
-Albert
Auster
FURTHER READING
Boyer,
Peter J. Who Killed CBS? The Undoing of America's Number One
News Network. New York: Random House. 1988.
Carter,
Bill. "Daniel Schorr Wins Top duPont-Columbia Journalism Award."
The New York Times, 26 January 1996.
Smith, Sally Bedell. In All His Glory: William S. Paley the Legendary
Tycoon and His Brilliant Circle. New York: Simon & Schuster,
1990.
See
also Cable
News Network; Columbia
Broadcasting System; News,
Network
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