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Paul bates
Paul bates








paul bates
  1. PAUL BATES FULL
  2. PAUL BATES PROFESSIONAL

After many years of lobbying for national recognition for their efforts, President Jimmy Carter gave the Black Panthers a Presidential citation for “extraordinary heroism in action.”Ĭolonel Paul Bates died in 1995 at the age of 86. Of the 687 enlisted men and 41 officers in the 761st, he became the first of 276 to be wounded.īates retired from the Army in 1963 after having been awarded the Silver Star, two Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart.

PAUL BATES FULL

Steadfast in his belief that the Black Panthers would prevail in combat, Bates refused a promotion to full colonel because it would have separated him from the 761st. Yes, it was the very same Jackie Robinson who went on to integrate major league baseball. The Black Panthers clashed for 183 consecutive days, capturing, destroying or liberating more than 30 major towns, 34 tanks and four airfields.īefore they left for Europe, Bates declined to court-martial one of his own soldiers, Jackie Robinson, who refused to move to the back of a bus. Knowing with strong conviction that not one race is superior to any other, he held everyone he led to the same standards and treated them as equals and this included the 761st Tank Battalion - the Black Panthers.Ĭolonel Bates believed in his men and fought for them to enter the World War II theater in November of 1944.

paul bates

PAUL BATES PROFESSIONAL

The core values on which McDaniel was founded (respecting others and sharing the responsibility for the common good) took root into Bates' daily work ethic and essentially served as the foundation for his professional career. He hailed from California and was a dedicated student in the Reserve Officer Training Corps. He is also survived by a sister and brother.Paul Bates came to the college as an Economics major and spent his time out of the classroom on the gridiron. The provincial Liberal government in 2015 named him to a panel to review Ontario’s regulations governing financial planners.īates is survived by his wife Sally, daughters Rachel, Elizabeth and Charlotte and three grandchildren. He taught marketing at the Rotman School of Management, served on the board of the Toronto Stock Exchange and as a commissioner for the Ontario Securities Commission.Īfter leaving DeGroote, Bates pursued studies at the masters and PhD level at McMaster’s Divinity College and worked there as an assistant professor. In 2000, Bates was named Canada’s most influential broker by Executive Magazine. He then became head of Charles Schwab Canada. He started Priority Brokerage and it was bought out by Charles Schwab. He later worked for Royal Trust and then First Marathon Securities in Toronto. He worked his way up and came to Canada in 1973 to work for the Bank of Nova Scotia. He directed traffic outside the National Westminster Bank and got to know a manager who offered him a job as a teller. He graduated from college and went to work as a traffic cop. 29, 1950, to Charles and Violet Bates and grew up in London. “There are probably a few, a handful, who perhaps if they were in a room without me, would say they’re not really sure about having a business person in here,” he told The Spectator in 2005.īates was born Dec.

paul bates

He was called “a perfect fit” by one McMaster official. He knew there was some grumbling from faculty about his hiring, but he believed he could smooth it over. “I think it came to both of us (then-McMaster president Patrick Deane) that we’d reached a point where there was an impasse that my staying wouldn’t solve,” Bates told The Spectator.Ī very successful businessman and leader in the investment world, Bates was the first person without a PhD appointed as dean. The $28-million facility opened in September 2010.

paul bates

The Carlisle-area resident went to work in a non-academic role at the Burlington campus on South Service Road. 4 at age 71 - stepped down a year into his second term in order to resolve the dispute. Though he was supported by some business students in a petition and a vote, and by businessman DeGroote (the school was named after him in 1992 due to a $3-million donation), 60 per cent of the 60-member faculty voted that Bates should not get a second five-year term in 2009. In this photo, Bates is pictured with students at the school's Allen H. Paul Bates in March 2004 after he was named dean of McMaster University's DeGroote School of Business.










Paul bates