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| President Ribeau, William Dallas and Scott Hamilton
(left to right) show off the check representing
the donation that will establish a BGSU center for
entrepreneurial leadership. |
Passion for enterprise
shared with students
Hamilton,
Dallas give $3 million to BGSU entrepreneurship center
Two friends with Bowling Green roots are sharing their
entrepreneurial passion with BGSU undergraduates to
help them develop their own entrepreneurial spirit.
Scott Hamilton, an Olympic gold-medal skater and Bowling
Green native, and William Dallas, a BGSU alumnus and
successful California businessman, presented a joint,
$3 million gift to the College of Business Administration
on April 29.
Their gift will fund the creation of the William and
Beverly Dallas and Scott and Tracie Hamilton Center
for Entrepreneurial Leadership.
In making the gift, Hamilton said that entrepreneurship
is a chance to give back. “To build something
and watch it grow and outlive you is a great gift,”
he said. “To help students take the next step
in their lives is one of the greatest thrills of my
life.”
He added that he made the gift in honor of Helen McLoraine,
the benefactor who supported him throughout his amateur
career, and his adoptive parents, Ernest and Dorothy
Hamilton, BGSU faculty members who are now deceased.
Part of the gift will establish the Ernest and Dorothy
Hamilton Professorship.
An elated Dallas said that theoretically, he and Hamilton
should not be joining together to do this as they had
not known one another in Bowling Green. But when they
ended up as neighbors in California and both shared
“a passion for helping people figure out what
it is they want to do,” as well as a connection
to BGSU—“it’s not possible, but it’s
happening.”
The gift presentation culminated “Turning Passion
into Enterprise: A Seminar for Entrepreneurs,”
the first event in the Bob and Karen Sebo Lecture Series.
Keynote speaker for the day was B. Thomas Golisano,
the 2004 International Philanthropist of the Year. Golisano,
founder of Paychex, Inc., is also the owner of the Buffalo
Sabres, a National Hockey League team.
More than 500 people were present for the daylong event,
which included panel discussions with local entrepreneurs
and BGSU faculty. (For more on Hamilton's speech at
the seminar, see the May issue of Monitor Monthly.)
The Dallas and Hamilton Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership
will ultimately include University academic programs,
community entrepreneurial leadership programs and education
outreach programs to the general community. The center
will sponsor forums on entrepreneurship, serve as the
incubator for new ideas and be a site for internships,
said Brent Nicholson, director of entrepreneurship programs
in the College of Business Administration.
Since the inception of the undergraduate minor in fall
2003, the entrepreneurship program has grown quickly
and will graduate its first six students next week.
The four classes currently offered have closed out at
44 students each, said college Dean Robert Edmister,
adding that the center will be a valuable recruiting
tool for BGSU.
Developing students’ ability to see new opportunities,
assess risks, make decisions and take action is a goal
of the entrepreneurship training, Edmister said. These
skills are applicable not only to new enterprises but
to existing businesses as well, he added.
The expansion of the program to include an undergraduate
minor was made possible by a $50,000 award from the
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation of Kansas City, Mo.,
in 2003. The entrepreneurship minor is not reserved
for business students but open to all majors.
The program had already received more than $800,000
in support from alumni this year, with gifts from Patrick
and Debra Ryan, both 1974 BGSU graduates, and Ron Whitehouse,
a 1967 alumnus, and his wife, Sue, who attended BGSU.
In discussing the goals of the program, Nicholson told
the audience, “We seek to make undergraduates
discontented and dissatisfied with the status quo.”
The program will foster “discontent with the notion
of boundaries on what can be accomplished,” he
added, and encourage “a mindset that rejects the
passive voice” in favor of a more proactive way
of dealing with the world. The entrepreneur is one who
embraces change, and change creates opportunities that
must be seized, sometimes at the risk of loss, he said.
Rick Acker, one of the first students to be graduating
with the entrepreneurship minor, said that the program
“gave me both the knowledge to make my ideas tangible
and the confidence to do so.”
Hamilton, who enrolled in classes at BGSU in 1976, was
named an honorary alumnus in 1985 and received an honorary
doctor of performing arts degree in 1994. He learned
to skate at the BGSU Ice Arena, won a berth on the U.S.
Olympic squad in 1980 and was voted Male Athlete of
the Year by the Olympic Committee in 1981. Hamilton
captured the gold medal at the 1984 Winter Olympic Games
in Sarajevo.
After graduating from the amateur ranks in 1984, he
toured for 15 seasons with Stars on Ice—which
he co-created and co-produced—and has independently
produced ice shows and covered the Winter Olympics as
a commentator for CBS Sports. He also received an Emmy
Award for a television special and won praise for his
biography, Landing It.
Hamilton now tours the country as a motivational speaker,
discussing his battle overcoming cancer and his career
on the ice. He is also involved in numerous charitable
endeavors across the country.
A 1977 magna cum laude graduate of BGSU, Dallas began
to make a name for himself as an entrepreneur almost
as soon as he graduated. He co-founded and served as
chairman and CEO of First Franklin Financial Corp. and
co-founded Heritage Bank of Commerce, both in California.
Today, Dallas is chairman and CEO of Ownit Mortgage
Solutions, an industry leader in nonagency residential
lending specializing in 100 percent purchase programs.
He holds the coveted Certified Mortgage Banker designation.
The entrepreneur earned a juris doctorate from the University
of Santa Clara in 1987. In 2002, Dallas received a BGSU
Accomplished Graduate Award. He recently retired as
chairman of California Lutheran University.
In 2001, Dallas and his partner, Bill Freeman, co-founded
B&B Restaurant Ventures with Fox Sports. The New
York-based television network launched Fox Sports Grill
in Scottsdale, Ariz., with a nationwide rollout planned
for later this year and into 2005.
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| Scott Hamilton expresses his pride
in being able to give back to his hometown. |
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