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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
February
Four chosen to receive
honorary degrees at U. of I. May commencement
Sharita
Forrest, News Editor
217-244-1072;slforres@uiuc.edu
2/13/06
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Four people have been
chosen to receive honorary degrees at the 135th commencement of the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on May 14 at Assembly Hall.
The speaker for the ceremony is yet to be named.
The honorary degree recipients:
• Julian Bond, chairman, National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, distinguished professor at American University, Washington, D.C., and
professor of history at the University of Virginia; honorary doctor of humane
letters degree. Since 1998, Bond has chaired the board of the NAACP, the oldest
and largest U.S. civil-rights organization. Bond served as a Georgia legislator
for 20 years, during his legislative tenure sponsored or co-sponsored more
than 60 bills that became law, and successfully fought for the creation of
a majority black congressional district in Atlanta.
• Elaine Fuchs, laboratory head of mammalian cell biology and development
of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University; honorary
doctor of science degree. A U. of I. alumnus, member of the National Academy
of Sciences and past president of the American Society for Cell Biology, Fuchs
is an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Her studies on the
molecular mechanisms underlying the development and differentiation of mammalian
skin, and how the processes go awry in various human diseases, including cancer,
are fundamental achievements known to scientists worldwide.
• Elbert “Burt” L. Rutan, president and CEO of Scaled
Composites LLC; honorary doctor of engineering degree. An aerospace
engineer, Rutan is an acknowledged leader in light-aircraft design and
manufacturing, having designed, fabricated and flown many of his own
designs over a period of 30 years.
Rutan designed the Voyager that set the record for the first flight
to circumnavigate the globe without refueling, as well as the SpaceShipOne,
the first private venture to successfully launch a manned vehicle into
sub-orbit and return safely twice in a two-week period. His ideas have
influenced military and general aviation aircraft and air transports
designed for passenger and cargo in space. Rutan is a member of the
National Academy of Engineering, a National Aviation Hall of fame honoree,
and received the Presidential Citizen’s Medal from President
Ronald Reagan.
• Thomas M. Siebel, founder and chairman of the board, Siebel Systems
Inc.; honorary doctor of engineering degree. Siebel, who began his career
with Oracle Systems and Gain Technology, founded Siebel Systems Inc. in 1993,
a developer of eBusiness software that has become a $2 billion corporation.
Siebel earned three degrees at Illinois and has been a generous donor to the
U. of I. and other universities. The state-of-the-art Thomas M. Siebel Center
for Computer Science at the Urbana campus and themulti-institutional Siebel
Scholars program were named in his honor. The U. of I. awarded Siebel the Presidential
Award and Medallion in 2001.
Siebel serves on several advisory boards at Illinois, Stanford
University and the University of California at Berkeley. The philanthropic
endeavors of Siebel and his wife, through the Thomas and Stacey Siebel
Foundation, have made a great impact in higher education, research
and innovation, and community wellness programs throughout the nation.
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