The Edward R. Murrow Symposium

Edward R. Murrow Award Winner of 2012

Dan Rather to Receive 2012 Award for Lifetime Achievement, Deliver Public Address

September 27 Beasley Coliseum • Free

WSU named veteran journalist Dan Rather distinguished recipient of the 2012 Edward R. Murrow Award for Lifetime Achievement. Rather will accept the honor and deliver a free, public address during the Thirty-Eighth Edward R. Murrow Symposium Sept. 27 in Beasley Coliseum at WSU-Pullman.

The fall award presentation is preceded this spring with three days of seminars, workshops, and panel discussions for professionals and students at the Murrow Communicators Summit, April 3-5, also at WSU-Pullman.

Advancing the Murrow legacy
Rather's career in news spans 60 years of world history. His earliest beat was the American South where he reported from the frequently violent front lines of the civil rights movement. In 1963, he broke the news of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and, in 2001, he anchored four days of live CBS News coverage of the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, helping guide his country through the trauma.

"Dan Rather has literally walked in the footsteps of Edward R. Murrow, in the field and at the anchor desk. He embodies the strength and courage that Murrow represented," said Lawrence Pintak, founding dean of The Edward R. Murrow College of Communication at WSU, who worked for Rather as a CBS News correspondent.

From his start with the Associated Press in Huntsville, Texas, in 1950, Rather became inextricably linked with the "eye" of CBS. He was anchor of CBS Evening News from March 1981 to March 2005, the longest such tenure in broadcast history. He has covered every major U.S. military conflict since the Korean War, every U.S. president since Eisenhower, and virtually every other major figure who has appeared on the world stage in the past 30 years. His two exclusive interviews with Saddam Hussein in 1990 and 2003 were news-making events in themselves. As a correspondent for 60 Minutes II, Rather broke arguably the biggest story of 2004: prisoner abuse at Iraq's infamous Abu Ghraib prison.

A leader in his field
On leaving CBS, Rather founded the company News and Guts and, in 2006, became anchor and managing editor of HDNet's Dan Rather Reports, which specializes in investigative journalism and international reporting. Last fall the program was awarded an Emmy for investigative business reporting.

"Like Murrow, Dan has chronicled some of the most extraordinary events of his time. And just as Murrow transitioned from radio to become a pioneer of television journalism, Rather has embraced the new digital era," Pintak said.

Free career-development events for communicators this spring
The three-day Communicators Summit in April features career-focused workshops, panels, and in-depth discussions among communication professionals, faculty, and students. Presented by the Murrow College of Communication and WSU, the Edward R. Murrow Symposium recognizes exceptional achievement in communication as it celebrates scholarship and connects students to industry leaders.

You can help support the Symposium
Through The Campaign for Washington State University:  Because the World Needs Big Ideas, the Murrow College of Communication aims to build upon its legacy of ethics, responsibility, and professionalism to meet growing international demand for highly skilled and responsible communicators. To support WSU’s Murrow College of Communication, contact Carol Kowalski at ckowalski@wsu.edu or 206-448-1332.

Dan Rather

Renowned newsman Dan Rather
The Edward R. Murrow College of Communication, Washington State University, 101 Communication Addition, P.O. Box 642520,
Pullman, WA 99164-2520, 509-335-1556, Contact Us