Office of the Dean College of Education The University of Georgia UGA COE Resources & Services Research & External Affairs COeNews COE Events COE Departments & Directories COE Admissions COE Academic Programs About the COE About the COE
Office of the Dean
Navigation
 


Council Home

About the Council

Mission and Goals

Members and Committees

News

Seminars and Events

Reports

Meeting Summaries

Resources

Archives

Georgia NAME Conference


   

News

ABC News correspondent to deliver Holmes-Hunter Lecture at
UGA

Globe-trotting news reporter Deborah Roberts of 20/20 will deliver the annual Holmes-Hunter Lecture at 2 p.m., March 7 in the Chapel. The lecture honors the late Hamilton Holmes and Charlayne Hunter-Gault, the first African-American students to enroll at the University of Georgia.

Since graduating from UGA in 1982, Roberts has risen through the ranks of television news, working as a substitute anchor for NBC news and a contributing reporter for Dateline NBC before joining 20/20 in 1995.

Her reports have taken Roberts from Saudi Arabia for stories on the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War to Barcelona, Spain where her coverage of the 1992 Olympics won an Emmy.

Roberts has chronicled the quests of African Americans who crossed overseas to the sites where their ancestors were captured as slaves. She's also delved into emotional issues
with pieces on manic depression in children and alcohol abuse with baseball star Darryl Strawberry.

Most recently, she won a Clarion Award for her investigation of alleged abuse within the Amish community.

She lives in New York with her husband, NBC weatherman Al Roker and children.

Holmes and Hunter-Gault enrolled at UGA in January of 1961 and graduated two years later. Holmes received a degree in science and enrolled as the first African-American student at Emory University School of Medicine. At the time of his death in 1995, he was an orthopedic surgeon in Atlanta and dean of the Emory medical school. He also served as chairman of the orthopedic unit at Grady Memorial Hospital.

Hunter-Gault received a journalism degree and wrote for The New York Times and The New Yorker for years. She later became a reporter for PBS's McNeil/Lehrer News Hour and was chief Africa correspondent for National Public Radio. She also was a CNN International Bureau Chief in South Africa. Hunter-Gault is the author of In My Place, a memoir about her experiences at UGA. She lives in Johannesburg, South Africa where she freelances.

  COE photo
 

 

 
 
  Building the New Learning Environment