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Remembering George L. Graziadio
George L. Graziadio, for whom the Graziadio School
of Business and Management - and thus the Graziadio Business Report
- is named, passed away on June 6, 2002, after a battle with cancer.
George came to California during World War II and
became a co-pilot and gunnery tester at a local B-25 bomber plant.
Years after meeting his wife, Reva, and raising their three children,
George met a builder/contractor named George Eltinge. The "Two Georges,"
as they became known, created a formidable business alliance, establishing
Eltinge and Graziadio Development Company and eventually developing
more than 100 shopping centers in 21 states. In 1962, frustrated
with the bank with which they had been doing business, they opened
their own financial institution with $1.25 million in private investment
and a belief that they could offer the Los Angeles business community
a better "business bank." This bank, which became Imperial Bank
in 1968, grew to $8 billion in assets, solely through internal growth
and without acquisitions, with $600 million in capital and reserves.
Imperial Bank's entertainment division was the largest financer
of independent motion pictures in the world. After achieving sustained
growth for decades, Imperial merged with Comerica, the country's
largest business bank.
A tireless entrepreneur, banker, and community sponsor
who lived his motto: "TNT - Today, Not Tomorrow," Mr. Graziadio
was also a generous benefactor to many worthy endeavors, including
the School of Business and Management at Pepperdine University.
Over the past five decades, he supported dozens of non-profit organizations.
In April 2002, he received the prestigious Horatio
Alger Award in Washington, D.C., joining other great Americans such
as President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Secretary of State Colin Powell,
Senator Robert Dole, and Oprah Winfrey. His many other honors include:
The Ellis Island Medal of Freedom; the Grande Ufficiale Award in
the Order of Merit of the Republic of Italy; Americanism Award and
the Good Scout Award from the Boy Scouts of America; the Eddy Award
from the Los Angeles Economic Development Agency; the President's
"E" Award from the U.S. Department of Commerce; the Albert Schweitzer
Leadership Award from the Hugh O'Brian Youth Foundation; and honors
from the Provence of Puglia, Italy, Newcomen Society, Pepperdine
University, B'nai B'rith Foundation, National Italian American Foundation,
the Center for the Partially Sighted, the Sons of Italy of America,
the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the House Ear Institute, and
a Doctor of Humane Letters from Chapman University.
Mr. Graziadio was much more than a businessman and
a philanthropist, however. He loved his family and his many friends
and was loved by them in return. He loved life. The following remarks
are taken from the tribute given to Mr. Graziadio by Dr. Otis Baskin,
former Dean of the Graziadio School, at Mr. Graziadio's memorial
service.
Tribute from Dr. Otis Baskin
George Graziadio was a devoted husband, father, grandfather,
a visionary business leader, tireless promoter of the welfare of
others.
He was born in Vernon, Connecticut, the grandson of
Italian and Irish immigrants who taught him the value of the "American
Dream" he lived. He often credited his father with giving him the
business drive and skill to succeed and his mother with giving him
the appreciation for service to others that made success worthwhile.
As a young man George moved west, and along the way
he met his life partner. Together George and Reva built a legacy
of good works in their adopted Southern California that will continue
to make a difference for generations to come. For 59 years George
and Reva shared their love, values, and lives with their three children,
nine grandchildren, six great grandchildren and numerous others
who love them and to whom love was returned.
George was a great business leader -- a visionary
entrepreneur who, together with his late partner George Eltinge,
built a commercial real estate empire and then, almost as an afterthought,
created a unique business bank that has fueled one of the world's
largest economies. These accomplishments, particularly in emerging
growth industries, helped to create the phenomenon of Silicon Valley
and the global dominance of the American film industry.
George had an ability to put his accomplishments into
perspective. He said, "You earn your living by working - you earn
your life by giving." And he gave generously. Because of the generosity
of George and Reva, many institutions that benefit the greater good
of our society are better able to do their work.
It was their generosity, along with George's tireless
leadership, that took a well-regarded local business school for
working adults and transformed it into a center for MBA education
that is recognized internationally and ranked as one of the leading
schools for executives in the world. All of this in only six years.
(His motto was TNT - Today Not Tomorrow!)
The Graziadio Executive Center, now under construction,
on our campus, will stand as a testimony to the remarkable life
he led, not only because it will bear his name, but most typically
because he requested that recognition be given to Reva and their
family along with his long-time business partner George Eltinge
throughout the building.
But George gave much more than the many millions of
dollars that continue to support education, healthcare and an improved
quality of life for people he will never meet. He gave his time,
the benefit of his insight, and his enormous heart to help others.
It was really George's capacity to care about others that distinguished
this great life and made it a force for good. He could work a room
of hundreds and still give individual attention to each person he
met. His legendary ability to stand before a great audience and
recall names and details about almost everyone in attendance came
from a deep respect for people not a trick of memory. I have been
approached by people all over the country who recognized the name
of our school and wanted to tell me personal stories about how George
had influenced their lives for good.
The New Testament tells us in Galatians 6:9 - "Let
us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will
reap a harvest if we do not give up." George never gave up.
But work and even good works were always second to
family. You didn't know George long before you knew his family.
He made it clear that they were a part of all he was. George and
Reva shared their love of travel with their family, often on cruises
to dramatic locations. All of us who were the privileged recipients
of those famous newsletters understood the close bonds of this family
and what they meant to George.
For example, George always enjoyed being present for
major events in the development of our business school. We worked
and planned together for five years for the day when our accreditation
would be announced. We planned a dinner that evening in San Diego
to celebrate (George was buying) but when it happened, he couldn't
attend - Gina, his opera singer granddaughter, was in a concert
that night. We understood and appreciated the example of his priorities.
I was privileged to work closely with George as dean
of The Graziadio School for six years and to know he was my friend.
I have many priceless memories including a completely unexpected
phone call early one January 1st when he called just to say, "Happy
New Year" to Maryann and me.
I first met George when he was considering his transforming
gift to our school. I received a call requesting that I come to
his office for a meeting. Two things impressed me. First, he had
asked that I send copies of my publications in advance of the meeting
and I was surprised to find that he had read them (something it
is difficult to get students to do even under threat of examination.)
The next surprise was his question to me: "What can
I do to help your school?" I knew he wasn't talking about the endowment.
We discussed the need for the story of this business school to be
understood at the highest levels of leadership and almost immediately
he began to make calls to his many friends. The result was a 100
member Board of Visitors with President Gerald Ford serving as its
honorary chair. This group of national and global leaders has helped
to guide the development of our school.
While he committed himself to the progress of our
business school with great enthusiasm, the traditionally deliberate
pace of progress in higher education was not always comfortable
for Mr. TNT. Convinced of the need for a permanent facility for
our school on the Malibu campus, George became anxious about the
pace of progress toward the start of construction. President Benton
(President of Pepperdine University) and I remember a luncheon meeting
in his boardroom where George had assembled experts in both regulatory
process and construction technology. When lunch (complete with plenty
of garlic!) was finished, an eight-to-ten year time frame had been
shortened to four years. We all left with a better understanding
of "TNT."
In the academic world, we have been trained to rigorously
examine the things around us and ask, "Why?" George had the gift
of seeing things as they could be and asking, "Why not?"
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