Hodding Carter III grew up with a family newspaper tradition of
challenging intolerance and championing civil rights. His father,
Hodding Carter Jr., was publisher and editor of the family-owned Delta
Democrat-Times in Greenville, Miss., and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1946
for editorials calling for racial tolerance. Throughout the civil
rights era, the Carter family and their newspaper faced burning crosses
on their lawn, death threats and boycotts for their stand in favor
civil rights and against Jim Crow segregation. Hodding Carter III
graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University in June 1957. He
spent two years in the Marine Corps and returned to Greenville in 1959
to follow in his fathers footsteps at the newspaper. For nearly 18
years, he was reporter-editorial writer, managing editor and editor and
associate publisher of the Delta Democrat-Times. In 1961, he won the
Sigma Delta Chi national award for editorial writing. He was a Nieman
Fellow at Harvard in 1965-66. Expanding his civil rights advocacy
beyond journalism and into politics, he helped organize a bi-racial
delegation to the 1968 Democratic National Conventions to unseat the
all-white segregationist Mississippi delegation. He worked on two
presidential campaigns for Lyndon Johnson and Jimmy Carter. In January
1977, Hodding Carter III became the spokesman for the State Department
and a familiar face to Americans watching his televised briefings
during the Iranian hostage crisis. In 1980, he launched an
award-winning career in television journalism, serving as host, anchor,
panelist, correspondent and reporter for a variety of other public
affairs television shows. He has written two books, "The Reagan Years"
and "The South Strikes Back." He held the Knight Chair in Public
Affairs Journalism at the University of Maryland College of Journalism
from 1995 to 1998. He has been president and CEO of the John S. and
James L. Knight Foundation since 1998. He is married to Patt Derian, a
veteran civil rights activist.