It was appropriate that on the day the Grand Valley community
gathered to remember founder L. William Seidman, an announcement was
made that his legacy will continue at the university.
President Thomas J. Haas announced that Richard and Helen DeVos
made the lead gift to launch efforts to construct a new building for
the Seidman College of Business. The announcement was made on Friday,
September 11, at the Seidman memorial, held in the Performing Arts
Center on the Allendale Campus. Seidman died May 13 at age 88.
“Rich and Helen would like to do something directly
memorializing Bill and holding up the Seidman legacy very high, and
with high hopes, to keep the memory of Bill Seidman and accomplishment
alive,” Haas said. The building will eventually be located on the Pew
Grand Rapids Campus, at a location to be determined.
DeVos, co-founder of Amway, was also a scheduled speaker at the
memorial service. “We are honored to contribute to this old tradition
of keeping this school good and helping make it better,” DeVos said.
“Plans are underway for this tribute and honor to him.”
More than 400 people attended the service. Tom Seidman welcomed
the audience and said the only regret he had was that his father was
not there. “He would have enjoyed this more than anyone else in the
room,” Seidman said. “He loved being with his friends and family, and
as much as anything, he loved Grand Valley.”
Many stories and memories were shared that recalled Seidman’s
service to his country, his family and the work that helped establish
Grand Valley. President Emeritus Arend D. Lubbers said his life
changed when Bill Seidman came to Iowa to recruit him as president for
this new college in West Michigan.
“When his life touched you, yours changed,” Lubbers said. “His
lifetime of good deeds will always be with us.”
Other speakers included Birge Swift Watkins, former national
investor outreach director, FDIC/RTC and former staff assistant to
President Ford; Roger Porter, IBM Professor of Business and
Government, Harvard University and Sue Herera, founding member of CNBC
and co-anchor of “Power Lunch.”
Porter recalled that he traveled with Seidman to Washington in
1977 when Seidman helped establish the Washington Campus program,
which would become a central location for college students across the
country to learn and study with the country’s top leaders. Grand
Valley was included in that pilot project and continues to send
students today.
In the 1960s, Seidman helped galvanize local support for the
establishment of a public four-year university in West Michigan. He
would later call establishing Grand Valley one of his greatest accomplishments.
Audio Clips
President Haas said it is fitting the memorial be held at Grand Valley because Bill Seidman insisted that the university be built. (audio clip)
President Haas announced that Rich and Helen DeVos made a significant gift to the Seidman College of Business (audio clip)
Tom Seidman said as much as anything his father loved Grand Valley State University (audio clip)
Rich DeVos said he and his wife Helen want to continue an old
tradition of making Grand Valley better by making a gift to the
Seidman College of Business (audio
clip)
Streaming video of the memorial can be viewed below: