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The Place To Be: Washington, CBS and the glory days of television news

Excerpt

During those nineteen years, six months and six days at CBS News, working in its Washington Bureau was the central experience of my life. There was no news bureau like it anywhere in television or, with two or three exceptions, in print. Of the hundred or so reporters and producers who worked in the bureau during those two decades, almost all of us were college graduates. Three or four went to the Ivy schools, a few more to private colleges but most attended the big public universities — Illinois, Indiana, Michigan State, Missouri, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, City College of New York and Rutgers. We were the sons and daughters of bakers, electrical engineers, ditch diggers, map makers, roofers, preachers, maids, architects, house painters, professors, coal miners, mill workers, deli owners, nurses, salesmen, bankers and manufacturers. Only two were from wealthy parents.

Being assigned to the Washington Bureau was never automatic; it meant either you were of top network quality or showed signs of it. We all felt privileged and lucky to be in the Bureau but each of us knew, given the competition within and without, we wouldn't stay long if we didn't measure up. This was no hiding place or dumping ground for losers.

Once in the Bureau, though, believing we were the best; we tended to swagger; we were aggressive, we out- covered, out-wrote and out-filmed our competition. We laughed at the gentlemanly, pipe-smoking NBC Bureau which sniffed at our hard-charging ways. They claimed their follow-up stories were superior to our breaking stories, not much of a claim if you're in the news business. We were quietly proud of each other's work, although compliments were rare, egos and vanity being obstacles.

The only time the rule was broken was when new reporters made their debut on the Cronkite show. We would gather around the big monitor in the newsroom to watch and to give the rookie a welcoming round of applause. The camaraderie was rough and tumble but genuine. Bob Schieffer felt he wasn't part of the Bureau until the night we all hooted at him for pronouncing it "tenderhooks" instead of "tenterhooks".

For me and the hundreds of others in the Washington Bureau those 20 years were the Glory Years of Television News.

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Copyright © Roger Mudd