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Katie Couric

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Since joining NBC News in July 1989 as deputy Pentagon correspondent, Couric has conducted a number of newsworthy interviews. Her 1996 interview with Bob Dole and his wife, Elizabeth, concerning Dole’s stance on whether tobacco is addictive, made headlines. Couric also conducted the first television interview of First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, the farewell interview of Joint Chiefs of Staff General Colin Powell, Anita Hill’s first television interview concerning her allegations of sexual harassment against Clarence Thomas, and General Norman Schwarzkopf’s first interview after the Persian Gulf War. In October 1992, after an interview with First Lady Barbara Bush at the White House for the 200th anniversary of the building, Couric conducted a 20-minute impromptu interview with President Bush.

More recently, Couric anchored two days of live coverage from Littleton, Colo., following the shooting rampage at Columbine High School in April 1999. Her critically acclaimed interview with the father of one of the victims and the brother of another made national headlines. She continued her coverage of the tragedy the following week with an in-depth interview at the White House with President Clinton, focusing on gun control and youth violence. In July, Couric was on-location in Nantucket, Mass., following plane crash that killed John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife and sister-in-law. In an exclusive television interview for "Dateline" in February 1999, Couric spoke with the parents of Matthew Shepard, a gay college student at the University of Wyoming who was the victim of a nationally publicized hate-crime incident.

From 1987 to 1989, Couric was a general-assignment reporter at WRC-TV, the NBC Television Station in Washington, D.C. While there, she won an Emmy and an Associated Press Award for her work. From 1984 to 1986, she was a general-assignment reporter at WTVJ in Miami. She began her career as a desk assistant for the ABC News bureau in her native Washington, D.C., in 1979. In 1980, she joined CNN as an assignment editor. She moved to Atlanta as an associate producer and later became the producer of a two-hour news and information program. She eventually became a political correspondent.

Couric has won two Emmys, an Associated Press Award, a Matrix Award, a National Headliner Award and the Society of Professional Journalists’ Sigma Delta Chi award. She has also received the Washington Journalism Review Award as Best in the Business and been named one of "Glamour" magazine’s Women of the Year.

Throughout her career, Couric has covered countless cancer-related stories, and has made colon cancer her focus both in her work and in her personal life. In the spring of this year, she will launch a national campaign aimed at increasing awareness of the disease. The National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance (NCCRA) was established in 1999 by Couric, Lilly Tartikoff and the Entertainment Industry Foundation to end the threat of colon cancer through education, new research and regular medical screenings. In 1998, Couric spearheaded a five-part series on colon cancer that aired on "Today," and will do the same this year in conjunction with the launch of the NCCRA.

Couric graduated with honors from the University of Virginia. She lives in New York with her daughters, Elinor Tully Monahan and Caroline Couric Monahan.

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