Thalia Assuras
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Thalia Assuras (born February 5, 1951) is a Canadian-born television journalist and news anchor who has worked for U.S. television networks since 1993. Assuras was born to parents who immigrated from Tripoli, Greece, after World War II. She was raised in her birthplace of London, Ontario.
[edit] Education
Assuras attended London Central Secondary School. She remained in London to attend the University of Western Ontario (UWO), pursuing a B.Sc (Honours) degree with the intent of going into medicine. She graduated in 1980, but in a change of career plans entered the graduate program in journalism and earning her master's degree in 1981. Twenty-one years later she commented on the impact the journalism program had on her:
- It's hard to describe my time at Western because it was a phenomenal turning point in my life. I always had these delusions of being a writer and I always overloaded my mind with information and literature. That program just brought things together for me.
[edit] Career
Assuras has worked for CITY-TV and Global Television, including a stint as reporter and weekend anchor for CityPulse from 1985 to 1988.
From 1992 to 1993 she worked for CTV, anchoring Canada AM. She then moved to ABC, and in May 1993, joined Aaron Brown as co-anchor of World News Now. She shared that late-night anchor desk with Boyd Matson, fellow Canadian Kevin Newman, and Mark Mullen before leaving the show in January 1997.
In 1997 she moved to CBS, first joining CBS Eye on People, a cable network that CBS launched in March 1997. She also worked as a national correspondent and later became co-anchor of The Saturday Early Show and then the CBS Evening News Saturday (in an alternating arrangement with Russ Mitchell). Currently Assuras is the solo anchor of CBS Evening News with Thalia Assuras on Saturdays and is a National Correspondent for The Early Show.
Milwaukee-based rock group, "The Mosleys" wrote a song about her called "Thalia".
In a June 22, 1998 article in Maclean's, Assuras commented on her reason for moving to the United States:
- I wanted to live in a different country. And I wanted to work where you have all the tools you need on a story.
On Saturday, April 2, 2005, Assuras anchored CBS's extensive breaking-news coverage of the death of Pope John Paul the Second.
[edit] Awards
The Daughters of Penelope recognized Assuras with the "2000 Salute to Women" award; She was awarded the Marie Torre Memorial Award in 2001.
[edit] External links
- Biography, from the CBS News website
- Thalia Assuras at the Internet Movie Database
- CBS journalist donates to new media facility, a November 2002 article from a UWO website
- What to do with a Western degree, an October 1998 article from a UWO website
- Canadians Invade U.S. News, a June 1998 article from Maclean's
- Cebar's long dues-paying pays off a September 19, 1997 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article that mentions local rock band, The Mosleys, who wrote a musical tribute to Assuras called "Thalia"