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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.11.2002 ET
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JPMorgan Chase Launches Leadership Competition Targeted to Top Business School Students
(CSRwire) NEW YORK, New York - JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), in collaboration with Aspen
Institute's Initiative for Social Innovation through Business (Aspen ISIB),
today announced the winners of the inaugural Walter V. Shipley Business
Leadership Case Competition. The competition, open to first-year graduate
business students from Columbia, NYU's Stern School of Business and the
Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania), was named after Mr. Shipley
who retired as Chairman of the Board of The Chase Manhattan Corporation
and The Chase Manhattan Bank in December 1999. The competition honors Mr.
Shipley, his leadership, and the undying commitment to ethics in the
workplace that he demonstrated in his 43-year career at the bank.
"In establishing this competition that honors Walter's name and
accomplishments in the area of business ethics, we had two goals in mind,"
said William B. Harrison, Jr., Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase. "First,
we wanted a program that gives the students a full appreciation of the
social and ethical aspects of business decisions. This business case
competition stimulates their thinking and supplements the classroom
experience. Second, we wanted to pay tribute to Walter Shipley and his
focus on ethics during his more than 17 years as Chairman and CEO," Mr.
Harrison said. The competition will eventually be widened to include
additional graduate schools of business.
Each of the participating schools conducted local competitions for
the first-year MBA students. Teams of four to five students reviewed a
specific business case scenario and were asked to make recommendations,
taking into account the serious social and ethical dilemmas presented in
the case. First-place teams from each school participated in the final
round of the competition at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York on April
10. A panel of judges, including Susan LaMonica, Senior VP, Human
Resources, JPMorgan Chase; William H. Donaldson, co-founder of Donaldson,
Lufkin & Jenrette; Dr. Mary Gentile, consultant and former faculty member
at Harvard Business School; Dr. Donna Wood, professor of business
administration at the Katz School of Business at the University of
Pittsburgh; and Walter Shipley, selected the team from NYU's Stern School
of Business as the overall winner. The team received a trophy and will
equally share a total of $20,000 in scholarship money.
"We worked extremely hard on this business case, realizing that there were
no absolutely right or wrong answers," said Gopal Tampi, captain of the
Stern team. "Our initial thought was to approach this primarily from a
financial perspective. We quickly learned the value of having many
different points of view and business perspectives in coming up with our
proposal. All of the teams in this competition deserve recognition for
their sophisticated processes and polished presentations." The $20,000
scholarship will be shared among Tampi and his teammates Bernardo Bichara
Assad, Birlie S. Lau, Einar O. Olafsson, and Philip A. Shields.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. is a leading global financial services firm with
assets of $694 billion and operations in more than 50 countries. With
relationships with over 99% of the Fortune1000 companies, the firm is a
leader in investment banking, asset management, private banking, private
equity, custody and transaction services, and retail and middle market
financial services. A component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average,
JPMorgan Chase is headquartered in New York and serves more than 30
million consumer customers and the world's most prominent corporate,
institutional and government clients.
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