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DATE:
October 20, 2006
The 2006 Business Leadership Banquet, October 19, paid tribute
to Leonard H. Lavin, Sally Jewell and Lex Gamble (BA 1959),
three great friends of the UW Business School from three
very different fields. Each received the UW Business School's
2006 Business Leadership Award.
Leonard Lavin is the founder and chairman emeritus of the
Alberto-Culver Company, an international giant in household
and beauty products with annual sales in excess of $3.5 billion
in 100 countries. Lavin, who attended the UW prior to serving
in the Navy during World War II, has received numerous awards
for his philanthropic, civic and business endeavors. In 1993,
he was inducted into the Merchandising Executives Club Hall
of Fame. He was awarded an honorary MBA degree from the UW
in 2001.
His rags-to-riches story behind him, Lavin currently serves
as entrepreneur-in-residence at San Diego State University,
where he teaches young Middle Eastern executives in conjunction
with a government program. "These are not like the
people you read about in the newspapers," he said. "They're
all eager to learn the American way of business. The idea
is that they will take these ideals back home and, little
by little, permeate this wall that separates us from the
people of the Middle East. I think it's one of the
most important things that this country has ever done, and
a value of business schools that we don't always think
about."
Sally Jewell is president and CEO of REI, the nation's
largest consumer cooperative, with 2.8 million active members
and more than $1 billion in annual sales, and a leader in
employment practices, corporate social responsibility and
environmental stewardship. With a degree in engineering from
the UW and experience in the energy and banking industries,
Jewell has been active in a variety of community and environmental
causes. She is chair of the UW Board of Regents, founding
board member of the Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust, and
board member of the National Parks Conservation Association
and the Initiative for Global Development.
In her remarks, Jewell said that the REI board met recently
to explore long-term issues facing the cooperative, and identified
four above all: climate change, globalization, urbanization,
and demographic shifts. "Those are the kinds of things
that students at the Business School are going to contend
with in their careers," she said "And they aren't
necessarily the same rules of engagement that those of us
who have been doing business for a long time have had to
deal with… We have all been plunderers of the planet.
Now we need to figure out how to do business in a smarter
way. And its places like the UW Business School that are
going to help all of us figure this out."
Lex Gamble (BA 1959), a founding partner of the Lockwood
Financial Group, has provided strategic and capital-raising
advice to more than 200 corporations during his 35-year career
as an investment banker, serving as managing director with
Smith Barney, Morgan Grenfell and Kidder Peabody. Gamble
serves on a number of non-profit boards, including the UW
Foundation and the Business School Advisory Board. He earned
his BA in business at the UW, where he was elected student
body president.
Among his kernels of wisdom on offer, Gamble advised acting
with integrity, taking an equity position in everything you
do and giving back, saying, "There's no greater
satisfaction than the returns that come from giving back."
Gamble, who received his MBA from Harvard after doing his
undergraduate work at the Business School, said in closing, "I
may have a degree from Harvard, but I got my real education
at the University of Washington."
Clayton Bennett, the new owner of the Seattle Sonics and
Storm, delivered the evening's anticipated keynote
address. Since the purchase of the popular basketball franchises
by his Oklahoma-based Professional Basketball Club LLC, Bennett
has quickly become a person of interest to fans of Seattle
sports and commerce.
Bennett pledged, "It is our absolute hope, belief,
desire, expectation that we will keep the Seattle Sonics
in this marketplace," but added, "We've
got a real challenge with the building… Key Arena is
not an acceptable venue for the NBA.
"I understand and appreciate that there are a lot more
important things than sports. We've heard a lot about
them tonight. And there are near-term capital needs that
this area has
relative to transportation, public health, safety and education
that are clearly more important. But I would also suggest
that the dynamic nature of this market could be enhance by
keeping the NBA in the marketplace, keeping the WNBA in this
marketplace, and having a world-class, state-of-the-art entertainment,
multipurpose commercial and trade facility. It could be an
important asset for this community in the future."
Bennett said his ownership group plans to present a plan
to the Washington state legislature in January.
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