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Introducing the аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê Carmel Boyer School of Business

The name, announced on April 29, honors the extraordinary examples of Willard "Bill" Carmel '52 and George Boyer '51, who shared a devotion to the success of generations of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê students.

In business and in life, Baldwin Wallace University graduates Willard "Bill" Carmel '52 and George Boyer '51 found the freedom to soar.

Willard E. "Bill" Carmel ’52 (left)and George T. Boyer ’51 (right) retired from the аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê board in October after a combined 94 years of service."These two distinguished alumni led parallel and intersecting lives of great purpose - building a legacy of exceptional career achievement, deep personal fulfillment and enduring community impact," said аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê President Bob Helmer.

Now, both men are honored in the new name for аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's business school: the Baldwin Wallace University Carmel Boyer School of Business, unveiled at a celebration on Friday, April 29.

The name celebrates a shared devotion to the success of generations of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê students that remained rock solid even as thriving finance careers anchored one in Northeast Ohio and took the other to New York City.

From curious students to titans of finance

Friends for 70 years, Carmel and Boyer connected while studying business at Baldwin Wallace in the late 1940s and early '50s.

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Both pride themselves on being students of legendary аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê business professor Jacob O. Kamm '40 and attribute the seeds of their career success to his influence. It is fitting that the Carmel Boyer School of Business is housed in аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's Kamm Hall, which bears their college mentor's name.

"Jake was responsible for so many of us who found success in financial services," Boyer shared. "He stimulated our minds. We had an investment club, and he instilled in us the idea of careful research and patience in investing."

Carmel called Kamm "inspiring," and both men recalled their professor taking them to visit C-suites around the region. "We would get all dressed up, tuck our Wall Street Journals under our arms and go downtown," Carmel remembers.

Carmel and Boyer both went on from college to achieve extraordinary business success in their careers. Carmel rose to be CEO of the Cleveland-based investment company McDonald & Company Securities; Boyer was a partner in the Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs.

Exemplary service, powerful leadership

But it was their roles as trustees of their alma mater that made them men of consequence in the history of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê.

"With nearly 100 years of combined service on the аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê Board of Trustees, Bill and George paid their success forward to generations of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê students who came after them, giving time, talent and treasure to аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê," notes аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê Board Chair Agnes Dover. "Their impact is extraordinary."

"As business leaders and trustees, both commanded respect," said Pat Dunlavy '71, who served as a trustee before taking on the role of VP for Philanthropy. "When they spoke, all trustees listened closely. Many of us who served with them consider both men to be mentors and friends."

Former аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê President Neal Malicky attended the celebration for Carmel and Boyer. In his memoir, Malicky recalled how vital the leadership of both men was to the success of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê. Carmel chaired the аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê Trustees for five years and led three capital campaigns. Former аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê President Neal Malicky wrote in his memoir that Carmel was a partner in аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's rebound from a financial slump during his time as president.

Malicky also approached Boyer about serving as board chair, but Boyer suggested his talents would best be leveraged as chair of the Investment Committee instead.

Building long-term аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê benefits

And so, Boyer (and Carmel, too) spent years providing leadership for the management of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's endowment, each applying their specialized financial acumen - Boyer on the equity side of the fund, Carmel on the fixed income side.

"They shouldered that significant burden of managing and growing the endowment for free, saving the University significant sums in investment fees," said Dick Fletcher '70, MBA '76, a recently retired longtime senior officer of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê. "George used to say the first thing he did in the morning was check the value of the аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê portfolio."

Such savvy and dedicated stewardship helped the endowment grow by leaps and bounds. In fact, аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's investment return was in the top five percent of all colleges and universities in the nation for a number of years.

Malicky recalled, "The leadership of George Boyer, Bill Carmel and other members of the Investment Committee was absolutely essential to such growth. It did and will bring long-term benefit to Baldwin Wallace."

Today, аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's endowment is a vital source of institutional stability and scholarship support for students.

Mentorship matters

Mentorship was another key value for each man as they developed, motivated and challenged young business talent the way they were taught and mentored as promising young аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê business students.

Bill Summers ’72 who was hired as intern by Carmel and succeeded him as McDonald & Company CEO, narrated a video that traced the impact of the pair on their alma mater, and called the two men “GOATsâ€

Carmel often recruited talent from аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê and found his eventual successor in a 20-year-old аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê intern he hired: Bill Summers '72.

"Bill [Carmel] became my mentor, coach and advocate," Summers recalls. "He was the equivalent of my business 'father,' and when my dad died in 1989, he became like an actual father to me."

Mentorship matters. Following Carmel's retirement, Summers was elevated to president of McDonald & Company and quickly added the title of CEO.

Advice for student success

Looking back, both Carmel and Boyer considered the range of values that undergirded their fulfilling careers and lives.

Carmel believes managers must remember that business is people-powered. "When people get into positions of power, I don't think you can be successful unless you really like people. If you're going to be in any management position, you have to like people and treat them the way you would want to be treated."

Bill Carmel (right) greets current BW business students in Kamm Hall during the naming event.

He also urges students today to "work hard and love what you do."

"Everybody is born with their own specific talents and advantages. You just have to find what you're good at. Find the right job and fall in love with what you do. From day one, I woke up ready and eager to get to work."

Boyer's advice to future business students, dispensed in a separate conversation, mirrors his longtime friend's. "Work hard, be charitable and have civility."

Boyer adds, "It's also important in life to be charitable and honorable. Like that line at the end of the movie 'Saving Private Ryan' says, 'Be a good person.'"

Representing the best of business

"Future аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê business students should know that their school is named for two of the finest businesspeople in investment banking, and they did it with class and dignity," Summers notes.

"There could not be more loyal, devoted, successful, classy, generous and kind businesspeople that ever walked the halls of аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê," Summers concludes. "How talented they were, yet humble; confident, hard-working and demanding, but fair and kind; generous but not boastful. There are no finer men in every respect than these two."

Carmel and Boyer embody what it means to be a "success:" pursuing their dreams with integrity, purpose and drive and finding the freedom to soar - in business and in life.

Individual bios and video tribute

Find out more in this story about Bill Carmel's extraordinary life and career.

Read more in this piece on George Boyer's extraordinary life and career.

Watch the video below, narrated by Bill Summers '72, to trace the intersecting lives, careers and impact on аÄéTÁùºÏ²Ê's School of Business by Jacob O. Kamm, Bill Carmel and George Boyer.

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