|
ABC
News Correspondent Ann Compton to Speak at UT
Tyler
Ann
Compton will be the speaker at the Vernon and
Amy Faulconer Lecture, which is a part of the
UT Tyler 2003-04 Distinguished Lecture Series.
Compton replaces retired Gen.
Wesley Clark who withdrew from the series in
an effort to avoid any problems with presidential
campaign finance regulations.
The Vernon and Amy Faulconer
Lecture featuring Compton will begin at 8 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 30 at the Cowan Center. Compton
also will be featured in a student seminar for
university students at 4 p.m. that day in the
Braithwaite Recital Hall of the Cowan Center.
Lecture tickets are $11, and
reception tickets are $51. Reception tickets
include valet parking, the lecture and a reception
with the speaker.
Advance lecture tickets for
faculty and staff, limited to four per person
with valid ID, will be free of charge but without
guarantee of seating preference. Advance student
tickets, limited to one per person with valid
ID, will be free of charge but without guarantee
of seating preference. Students, faculty and
staff may purchase an unlimited number of additional
tickets as needed beginning one day in advance
of single ticket sales to the public and continuing
until tickets are sold out.
Compton is now covering a sixth
President for ABC News in a career that has
taken her to the White House, Capitol Hill and
through seven presidential campaigns.
On Sept. 11, 2001, she was
the only broadcast reporter allowed to remain
onboard Air Force One during the dramatic hours
when President George W. Bush was unable to
return to Washington.
Her reports during the crisis
were cited as ABC News received the prestigious
Silver Baton Alfred I. DuPont Columbia University
award for its coverage. Compton was also on
the team that received an Emmy and a Peabody
award for ABC News' Sept. 11 reporting.
After the Watergate scandal
came to an end, Compton became the first woman
assigned to cover the White House by a television
network, and she was one of the youngest to
receive the assignment.
In 2000, Compton became chief
Washington correspondent for ABCNews.com where
she wrote and anchored a daily political column
On Background. Currently she also holds the
title of national correspondent for ABC Radio
News, heard daily on hundreds of ABC Radio stations
as she covers the White House.
She
began her broadcasting career in Virginia where
an internship at Hollins College (now University)
led to a fulltime job reporting for WDBJ TV,
a CBS affiliate in Roanoke. Compton established
a State Capitol Bureau in Richmond for the station.
In 1973, ABC News hired Compton and she reported
from New York until December 1974 when she was
assigned to the White House.

Contact
person: Emily Battle,
(903) 565-5604

|