Birth and youth
Escaping Hitler
Moving to the U.S.A.
Leading the way
Reflecting on life
Establishing the scholarship
1916 - Birth and youth
Paul Robitschek was born in Prague on October 15, 1916, to Otto and Frieda
(Bedriska) Robitschek. Their home was on Old Town Square at 21 Michaelska.
Paul's brother, Marcel, was born on May 14, 1915. He now lives in Vancouver,
B.C. and has two daughters.
Otto Robitschek was a wholesale textile merchant. He had a reputation as an
honest businessman, with a special skill for arbitrating disputes. He came to
the United States for a few years early in his career and returned to Czechoslovakia,
where he married Frieda. She was 15 years younger. She did not work outside
of their home. Otto died of cancer in 1932. Frieda died of pneumonia in 1938
or 39.
Paul attended elementary and secondary school in Prague. For a brief time,
he studied medicine at Charles University but at age 22, he came down with scarlet
fever and had to withdraw from his studies.
1939 - Escaping Hitler
On March 15, 1939, Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia and 15 days later, Paul
got out of the hospital and took a train to London. In London, Paul enrolled
in Northern Politechnic (now the University of London) and to study chemistry.
He graduated two years later.
Paul's first job was in research with De La Rou, a major British manufacturer
of plastics. He worked in their laboratories for four years, from 1942-46. In
1946, Paul was hired by Leta Chemical Company, where he worked until 1949.
1949 - Moving to the U.S.A.
In 1949, Paul left England for the United States. He was hired by Hooker
Chemical, in Niagara Falls (later acquired by Oxidental Petroleum). Hooker
was then a major manufacturer of organic chemicals, and was interested in getting
into plastics research.
At Hooker, Paul worked for Jesse Babcock, who told Paul, "If you make
yourself useful, we'll keep you. If you don't, we'll fire you."
Paul convinced Hooker to get into plastics. Two years later, he was made a
supervisor, with 5-6 people reporting to him. Two years later, he was promoted
to manager, with 30 people reporting to him, 15 of which had PhDs in chemistry.
Hooker then changed its name from Hooker Chemical to Hooker Chemical and Plastics.
Paul was again promoted to Director of Research, and remembers "working
like a dog" for 9 years. During his tenure, Hooker acquired 30-40 patents.
Paul reported directly to J.H. Bruun, Director of Research.
1958 - Leading the way
In 1958, Paul left Hooker for Owens Corning Fiberglass in Granville, OH,
where he worked as Manager of Plastics. While there, Owens secured several
patents on fiberglass bonding.
In 1963, Paul went to Central Processing, which was owned by Vancouver Plywood,
and manufactured adhesives for plywood. At that time, there were 7-8 companies
on the West Coast that produced glue for the plywood industry. Central Processing
was the smallest and least profitable of these companies.
Within the first 6 months with Central Processing, Paul fired all of the employees
and one year later he convinced Vancouver Plywood to sell the unit to Skelly
Oil (which later was taken over by Getty Oil).
In 1965, Skelly formed Chembond. Paul was appointed President of the company
and served in that position from 1965-1981. During his tenure, Chembond grew
from 20 to 150 employees, working on four shifts 24 hours a day. The company
became very profitable, and in 1979, sales went to $40 million. Within the industry,
the company also went from the bottom of the list to the top three in the country.
Paul was the "darling" of the company.
Paul remembers Chembond well, as a "fair" company. The company philosophy
was to always be truthful, open and fair. The company was always lean with highly
motivated and loyal employees. If employees did not work hard, they did not
stay. For those who worked hard, compensation was fair. Paul remembers never
being dishonest or telling a lie to his employees or to management.
1981 - Reflecting on life
In 1981, Paul retired at age 65. He remembers with pride his career with
Skelly. Paul greatly admired Donald Miller, then President of Skelly, as a
man of extraordinary compassion. He believes that he was a "tough taskmaster" and
believed that throughout his career, the companies that he worked for saw results
if
you left him alone to do his job. Paul believes that you "reap what you
sow." He worked hard and demanded hard work from his employees. He also
believed in always being honest and fair with all those with whom he worked.
Paul's wife, Alice Sandell, was born in London in 1917. They met during the
war at a social occasion. At the time, she was working as a secretary at a fashion
house. Alice was interred during the war in Italy. She was repatriated in 1944.
Paul and Alice knew each other for five or six years before being married in
1951.
Alice worked outside of their home only for the first year of their marriage.
During her life, she spent her time making a home for the Robitscheks and working
at her interests in weaving, drawing and flower arranging. They had no children.
In 1979, Paul had surgery for a cancer in his leg, the same year they built
his current home in Eugene. After his retirement in 1981, the Robitscheks traveled
in England and Yugoslavia, but did not return to the Czech Republic until after
1989. Since then, he has been back four times. Alice died of cancer in October
of 1990.
1996 - Establishing the scholarship
In 1996, Paul established the Robitschek Czech Scholar Program with the University
of Nebraska. Because of his commitment to democracy and free market economics,
Paul established the program to give talented Czech students the opportunity
to spend a year in the United States to have a broad experience living in our
culture. The goal, simply, is to give students who might not otherwise have
the means an opportunity to fully experience American student life.