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Media
Contact:
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470.
Dec.
2, 2002
NC State
to Award Honorary Degrees to Businessman, Meteorologist
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Two
distinguished figures -- a businessman and a meteorologist
-- will receive honorary degrees at North Carolina State
University's Fall Commencement on Wednesday, Dec. 18,
at the RBC Center in Raleigh.
Chancellor
Marye Anne Fox will confer honorary degrees on behalf
of NC State to Dr. Jim Goodnight, SAS Institute president
and CEO who is also the commencement speaker, and Thomas
Karl, director of the National Climatic Data Center.
Goodnight
received bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees from
NC State, and it is there that he began work on what
would become SAS (Statistical Analysis System) software.
SAS Institute is now the largest privately held software
company in the world, and is lauded as one of the best
companies to work for, with employee turnover at around
4 percent in an industry where the average turnover
is roughly four or five times higher.
Goodnight
served as a faculty member at NC State from 1972 to
1976, and continues to serve as adjunct professor. He
is also a fellow of the American Statistical Association
and author of several papers on statistical computing.
In
1997, Goodnight co-founded Cary Academy, an independent
co-ed college preparatory schools for students in grades
six through 12. The school integrates technology into
all facets of education.
In
addition to Karl's director duties at NCDC, the world's
largest data center for climate data and information,
he also manages the Climate Change Data and Detection
Program Element for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's Office of Global Programs.
Karl
is best known for his work on climate change - he has
authored about 100 articles in peer-reviewed journals
and more than 200 technical reports. He is the editor
of the Journal of Climate and associate editor for Climate
Change. He has also been called on to brief the White
House and Congress on climate variability and climate
change.
Karl
is a fellow of the American Meteorological Society and
the American Geophysical Union, and has received numerous
awards for his climate work. He did postgraduate work
at NC State after receiving a master's degree from the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, and a bachelor's degree
from Northern Illinois University.
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