Monday, November 9, 2009

Nation & World

Washington Whispers by Paul Bedard

CBS's Bob Schieffer Opens His Home to Russian Student

July 03, 2009 12:07 PM ET | Paul Bedard, Nikki Schwab | Permanent Link | Print

By Nikki Schwab, Washington Whispers

As if the life of genuine nice guy Bob Schieffer, boss of CBS's Face the Nation, isn't hectic enough, this summer he's piled on the role of mentor and Washington cultural ambassador to a Russian student. And not just any kid: Twenty-one-year-old Dariya Fadeeva was late to school on Sept. 1, 2004, when terrorists attacked her Chechen school, injuring her sister and killing more than 300, half of them children.

While hosting visiting students in the nation's capital is nothing new, it's a first for Schieffer, who met Fadeeva in 2006 at a première of a 48 Hours documentary on the three-day siege. Later, Schieffer and wife Pat helped Fadeeva apply for a scholarship to his alma mater, Texas Christian University, and she got it. Last summer, she interned for CBS in New York with 48 Hours producer Susan Zirinsky, and now Fadeeva is Schieffer's responsibility. "We have joint custody of Dariya," he jokes.

The folksy 72-year-old newsman makes having a student around for the first time in years sound like pure joy. "You know, when you get to be my age and your kids have been away from home for a while, you forget how much fun it is to have a young person around the house, just to get their take on things," Schieffer says. "It's like the old days," he gushes. "She comes home at night and tells us everything that happened that day." And that's a lot, he adds, because she's a brainiac. "She just brings these books home that weigh 4 pounds, and she's right in the middle of them," he says. "She's one of these kids that really reads the books—much more than I did when I was in college, that's for sure." And he's pretty convinced that his first summer student guest is going places. "I probably won't live to see it, but this is the kind of person who might end up being the president of her country, or ours, if you didn't have to be born here."

Illustration by Ed Wexler for USN&WR

Check out our gallery of Whispers political caricatures and gallery of political cartoons.

Follow Paul and Nikki on Twitter.

Read more Washington Whispers.

Tags: CBS | Washington, DC

Tools: Share | | Comments (7) | Print

Reader Comments

Not a Chechen school

It was not a Chechen school, but a North Ossetian school in Beslan. In fact, the Chechens and their brethren Ingush captured the school and at the end over 330 hostages died, most of them children.

It's good to hear such warm stories regardless

Ygtcctjx

HAZCti

Spotted

I saw them having lunch outside together at Port of Piraeus last week. Though she was an intern. Looked like granpa taking his granddaughter out to lunch.

Add your thoughts

Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

advertisement

Subscribe Today

U.S. News Weekly promotional image, for Washington Whispers

Want Your Whispers First?

Get the original Washington Whispers in an all new digital form. Check out U.S. News Weekly today.

advertisement

NEWSLETTER

Sign up today for the latest headlines from U.S. News & World Report delivered to you free.

RSS FEEDS

Personalize your U.S. News with our feeds of blogs and breaking news headlines.

U.S. NEWS MOBILE

U.S. News daily briefings are also available on your mobile device.

Bobbles Poll: Vice President Hillary?

Biden, Clinton, Richardson and Edwards Bobbleheads, for Washington Whispers

A new Obama campaign book suggests that Hillary Clinton was almost picked by Barack Obama as his vice president. Would you have picked Joe Biden as vice president or one of the other 2008 Democratic primary candidates?

View Results

Put Washington Whispers on Your Site

Keep up with all the latest Washington news and gossip by adding our Washington Whispers widget to your website.

Get this widget ยป

Twitter and Facebook

facebook and twitter icons

Whispers on the Web

Friend Paul on Facebook.

Follow Paul on Twitter.

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.
Make USNews.com your home page.