- Hodding Carter III
Hodding Carter, III (born
April 7 ,1935 ), is an Americanjournalist andpolitician best known for his role as assistant secretary of state in theJimmy Carter administration.Biography
Carter was born in
New Orleans to journalist andpublisher William Hodding Carter, II (1907-1972), and the former Betty Werlein (1910-2000). He grew up inGreenville, Mississippi , aMississippi River delta city which is the seat of Washington County,Mississippi . Carter attended Greenville High School and then transferred toPhillips Exeter Academy inNew Hampshire , from which he graduated in 1953. He then attendedPrinceton University inPrinceton, New Jersey , having graduated "summa cum laude" in 1957. That same year, he married the former Margaret Ainsworth. They had a son, Hodding Carter IV, and three daughters, Catherine Carter, Margaret Carter, and actressFinn Carter (born 1960). The couple divorced in 1978, and Carter that same year married Patricia Murphy "Patt" Derian, then ahuman rights official in the Jimmy Carter administration and an author on topics relating to foreign policy,civil rights , and the "New South".Carter has a brother, Philip Dutartre Carter (born 1939), former publisher of the "Delta Democrat-Times", of Greenville, the newspaper started by their father and later publisher of the "Vieux Carré Courier" and financier of the weekly paper "Gambit," both of New Orleans. Another brother, Thomas Hennen Carter (1945 - 1964), killed himself while playing
Russian roulette .After Princeton, Carter served in the
United States Marine Corps for two years. In 1959, he began working for the "Delta Democrat-Times" as a reporter. He was thereafter the paper'smanaging editor and associatepublisher . He also wrote the book "The South Strikes Back". He won theSigma Delta Chi National Profession Journalism Society Award for Editorial Writing in 1961. cite web | url=http://www.americanpressinstitute.org/content/713.cfm?id=713 | title=American Press Institute Mini-Biography]In the 1960s, Carter was involved in civil rights movement, both editorially and in political action. In 1968, he co-chaired the board that dissolved Mississippi's previously all- white delegation to the
Democratic National Convention , but later criticized that newDelta Ministry in his editorials. [Journal of Interdisciplinary History - Volume 36, Number 1, Summer 2005, pp. 122-123 - Review of "Divine Agitators: The Delta Ministry and Civil Rights in Mississippi. By Mark Newman (Athens, University of Georgia Press, 2004)"]In 1964, he worked on
Lyndon Johnson 's presidential campaign, but Johnson and his vice-presidential choice,U.S. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey ofMinnesota , received only 13 percent of the vote in Mississippi in the last election held prior to passage of theVoting Rights Act of 1965 . Carter also worked on Jimmy Carter's campaign in 1976. President Carter appointed him Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and State Department spokesman. [cite web | url=http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/po/12109.htm | title= List of Assistant Secretaries of State for Public Affairs (US Government)]Because of the
Iran Hostage Crisis , Carter came into the public eye much more frequently than most of his predecessors and successors.When
Ronald Reagan was elected in 1980, Carter left his post in the government and moved into television. Up until 1994, he held various positions for ABC,BBC , CBC,CNN ,NBC , andPBS , including anchor,commentator , panelist, and reporter. He also regularly wrote op-ed columns for various newspapers including the "Wall Street Journal ".Beginning in 1994 he served as the Knight Professor of Public Affairs Journalism at the
University of Maryland, College Park . He resigned the post in 1998 to become the president of theKnight Foundation . He serves on a commission funded by the foundation, theKnight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics .Since then, Carter has lectured at universities all over the country and continued to do freelance work for the television and print media. His most recent position is University Professor of Leadership and Public Policy at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill . [cite web | url=http://www.unc.edu/news/clips/aug05/aug11.htm | title=Chapel Hill news mentioning Carter's new position]References
*http://www.nndb.com/people/727/000116379/
*http://www.nybooks.com/articles/4691
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