Arts & Entertainment
Ann Compton Lecture Tonight Takes Audience Inside the White House
DeSales' Marcon Lecture features first woman assigned to cover the White House by a television news organization

ABC News White House correspondent Ann Compton will deliver the 28th Annual Frank L. Marcon Lecture at DeSales University today, April 7, at 7:30 p.m.
Compton has worked at ABC since 1973 and has covered the White House since 1974.
The lecture series was established in 1983 in honor of a prominent area businessman, Frank L. Marcon. Marcon served on the DeSales University Board of Trustees from 1966 until his death in 1982.
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Other notable speakers have included: NBC anchorman for the Today Show Bryant Gumbel, Emmy award winning television journalist Charlie Rose, and Philadelphia news anchor and author Larry Kane.
Compton’s speech, titled “Inside the White House,” is free and open to the public. Earlier in the day, Compton will meet with DeSales students during a private session. There will also be a question-and-answer session with the audience following the public event, for which tickets are still available.
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Compton has traveled the globe with presidents, vice presidents and first ladies. She served as a panelist for presidential debates twice and was assigned as a floor reporter at the 1976 Republican and Democratic national conventions.
An internship at Hollins University led to a full-time position as a television reporter when in 1973 ABC News hired her and she reported from New York for one year before being assigned to the White House.
Compton was the first woman assigned to cover the White House by a television news organization and was one of the youngest to even receive the honor. In her career she has covered seven presidents and has spent four years reporting from Capitol Hill.
Compton’s coverage of Sept. 11 was recognized in ABC News’ Emmy and Peabody awards and she was part of the team awarded the prestigious Silver Baton Alfred I. DuPont Columbia University award. Another notable fact is that she was the only broadcast reporter allowed to remain onboard Air Force One during the dramatic hours when President Bush was unable to return to Washington.
All achievements aside, the married mother of four has said that her most valued award is a golden statuette from the National Mother’s Day Committee naming her Mother of the Year in 1988.
The event is open to the public free of charge, but tickets are required. For tickets, call 610-282-1100, ext. 1364. For any questions, tickets or to be invited to the student session contact Tom McNamara, Executive Director of Communications.