Dr. Neil Frank, Speaker - November 2008 Christian Business Luncheon
Christian Business Luncheon
    Christian Business Luncheon
Proverbs 27:17 "Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend."


November 11, 2008 Luncheon

Speaker: Dr. Neil Frank

Topic: The Sky is Falling

Known to us well, Dr. Neil Frank, the most well-known weatherman of our lifetime, will be joining us as our November speaker. He will share his personal testimony and how he balanced his beliefs with his work, and he will discuss global warming as it relates to the evangelical church “The Sky is Falling.”

Frank grew up in Wellington, Kansas and attended nearby Southwestern College where he played with hopes of becoming a coach. However, after receiving his bachelor's degree in chemistry in 1953 and doing some military work, he moved on to Florida State University, where he earned his Master's and Ph.D. degrees in meteorology.

Frank is married, to his wife, Velma, and they have three grown children named Pamela, Debra, and Ron. They have all married and Frank is the proud grandfather of ten children: Caryn, Lisa, and Davis DeRuiter, Dustin, Brandon, Jordan, and Alyssa Tucker, and Mitchell, Korinne, and Forrest Frank.

Prior to his graduate studies in meteorology, Frank served in the United States Air Force where he received training as a weather officer. In 1961, he began working as a forecaster for the National Hurricane Center (NHC.) He was appointed director of the Center in 1974. While director, he also served as chairman of the International Hurricane Committee. He participated in meteorological experiments conducted off the African coast. In 1987, he was called to testify as an expert witness before the United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. To date, Frank is the longest serving director of the NHC. As NHC director, he was in the news frequently when hurricanes threatened, appearing in numerous interviews with then-CBS news anchor Dan Rather, whose early career included coverage of several hurricanes.

In 1980, he helped developed an amateur radio program to provide public information to endangered areas and speed information exchange, a precursor to the weather radio system the National Weather Service now uses. The system was developed during Hurricane Allen, when the storm decimated parts of St. Lucia and then Brownsville, Texas.

In June, 1987, Frank retired from the National Hurricane Center and joined Houston's CBS affiliate, KHOU-TV. He was already well-known to the Houston public from his reports as Director of the NHC, particularly those during Hurricane Alicia, which came ashore near Houston in 1983. Frank was the chief meteorologist for the television station for over 20 years, receiving numerous awards and recognitions. In December 2007, Frank announced that he would retire the following year from broadcasting at KHOU-TV. Frank retired May 30, 2008, but continues to provide the station with special weather projects and hurricane coverage.

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