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The gift will support the Department of Meteorology's weather center, including its new facility on the sixth floor of Walker Building on the University Park campus. It is the largest gift ever made to the department and among the largest ever received for programs in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences.
In recognition of Myers' generosity, the new weather facility will be named The Joel N. Myers Weather Center.
Myers received his bachelor's, master's and doctorate degrees in meteorology from Penn State and is the founder, president and chairman of AccuWeather, Inc., a global multimedia weather information source dedicated to saving lives, protecting property and helping people prosper.
AccuWeather is headquartered in State College, Pa. Now a household name, AccuWeather presents accurate, localized and branded forecasts and severe weather bulletins to over 110 million Americans each day via the Internet, mobile devices, the AccuWeather Television Network and new technologies, such as Internet Protocol Television (IPTV), as well as through the airwaves and in print.
With more than 350 employees, including 113 meteorologists, AccuWeather delivers a portfolio of customized products and services to more than 250,000 media, business, government and institutions worldwide and informs hundreds of millions of visitors around the globe through the free AccuWeather.com website and through more than 200,000 third-party Internet sites that feature AccuWeather.com forecasts."AccuWeather's success has been tied to the Penn State experience in many ways and for many decades," said Myers. "What I learned from this great university as an undergraduate and graduate student, as a faculty member for 17 years, and then for the past 28 years as a member of the Board of Trustees, has been a major factor in my success, in AccuWeather's success and in the success of many people who have been affiliated with Penn State. This donation is one way in which I want to say 'thank you' for what Penn State has meant to me throughout my life." "We're extremely proud that the name of one of Penn State's most prominent and influential graduates in meteorology will be identified with one of the Department of Meteorology's most visible and important facilities," said Spanier. "In addition, Joel's philanthropy serves as an inspiration to other alumni and friends as they consider their own major gifts to Penn State, and as we draw nearer to launching the public phase of the university's capital campaign." For the Future: The Campaign for Penn State Students is set to kick off in April 2010.
Myers, too, expressed a hope that his own commitment would serve as a "spark" for further giving by other Penn Staters.
"I've served as a University Trustee for nearly 30 years, and I have seen time and again how major gifts can transform entire programs," he said. "In this case, Penn State's meteorology program has long been ranked among the nation's best. My aim is to ensure its continued prominence and to help lift it to even higher levels of achievement." William Easterling, dean of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, noted that the weather center facility recently underwent a complete renovation.
"It's now extremely well positioned to benefit from the kind of dependable endowed support that Joel's gift will provide," he said. "One of the most critical needs is to keep up to date with technology. That means replacing computer and other information systems every three or four years, just to keep pace with changes in the state-of-the-art. The weather center also serves as a place to nurture camaraderie among future generations of Penn State meteorologists, a place where they can develop the friendships and shared experiences that contribute to the unique, lifelong bond among our alumni." As part of the donation, AccuWeather will be featured through its state-of-the-art weather forecasting and presentation products available in the weather center, including the Local AccuWeather Channel and AccuWeather.com Professional. This will expose students to the most modern weather forecasting technology.
Myers, a Philadelphia native, founded AccuWeather as a one-man shop in 1962, while he was a Penn State graduate student, fulfilling a long-held ambition to begin a business that would educate mass audiences about the weather and how it impacts everyday life. Since then, AccuWeather has since evolved into an internationally known company, while Myers has won numerous awards for his business acumen, including being named by Entrepreneur magazine as one of the top 500 entrepreneurs in American history.
Meanwhile, he retained an interest in the science of weather and served on the University's meteorology faculty from 1964 until 1981. For 18 years, Dr. Myers appeared on the Penn State "Weather/World" broadcast. In 1981, he was first elected to Penn State's Board of Trustees. He has been reelected to nine consecutive three-year terms as a Trustee since that time.
His previous philanthropy to Penn State includes gifts for scholarships in meteorology and information sciences and technology, including weather-themed sculptures such as the sundial by the Nittany Lion Inn and the frequently televised Nittany Lion Weathervane atop Beaver Stadium.
Penn State began keeping comprehensive weather records in 1882. The weather center dates from about 1935, when the Department of Meteorology was established. Today, about one in four meteorologists in the United States holds a Penn State degree.
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