Mick Kulikowski, director of strategic communications and media relations at NC State. My fondest memory of Chancellor Woodson, I think, really epitomizes the type of person that he is. It was when Hunt Library was first opened and he was leading a group of dignitaries, including, at the time, US Senator Kay Hagan and a bunch of other people through Hunt Library to show them how just cool it was and all the different spaces inside of it. I went along because I believe that media were invited to it, and so I sort of just went along as an extra. At one point during the tour, the group was looking at one space and then Chancellor Woodson saw inside another room a bunch of students working on something. And so, while the rest of the tour sort of proceeded on continuing the tour, the chancellor walked in on the students. And I remember, I was standing outside the door, and I remember him saying, ÒHey, what are you all working on?Ó And they were all just sort of like, ÒHey, it's the chancellor.Ó And they started to tell him stuff. Meanwhile, like, the group is moving on, probably to a different floor. I'm waiting to see whether the Chancellor is going to come out, whether he knows where the next stop is on the tour of the building. But I think that it encapsulates who I've seen the chancellor as for the last 14 years, which is a person who, just within that one visit right, was able to talk to dignitaries, politicians, others about an important new building on NC StateÕs campus, yet take the time out of that tour to go just talk to regular students who were inside the building doing something that he, you know, wanted to find out about. And so that ability to really make friends or be companionable to all types of people is a gift and a skill, and I talk about this all the time about him. That is a gift, a rare gift, that he could relate to people of various types and various ages, various backgrounds and do it, it seems to me, seamlessly. It's probably pretty hard for him but, to me, it just seems seamless.