Industry & Services >> CEO Interviews >> March 8, 1999

David Lasky – Curtiss-wright Corporation (cw)

DAVID LASKY is Chairman and President and CEO of Curtiss-Wright Corporation. Mr. Lasky was elected to the positions of Director, President and Chief Executive Officer of Curtiss-Wright in May of 1993. He assumed the additional position of Chairman of the Board in May of 1995. Since his election as President, Mr. Lasky has been involved in directing Curtiss-Wright towards the objective of sustained, profitable growth, despite the substantial contraction of its defense markets. To this end, the Corporation has made significant investments while maintaining its profit performance. Prior to his election as President, Mr. Lasky was a career member of the Curtiss-Wright Law Department, rising to the position of General Counsel and Chief Legal Officer at the age of thirty-eight. In this position, Mr. Lasky was primarily involved in corporation and business law, government contract matters and the supervision of litigation. In his additional roles as a Vice President and then a Senior Vice President of the Corporation, he functioned as an advisor to the then Chairman and President on numerous business issues and performed special assignments for him. Mr. Lasky, a native of the New York City area, received his B.A. from Brooklyn College in 1954, graduating magna cum laude with Honors in history, having been elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He graduated from Columbia Law School in 1957 as a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar. Among the organizations of which Mr. Lasky is a member: The President's Association (American Management Association), Business Executives for National Security and The Manufacturer's Alliance for Productivity and Innovation. While functioning as General Counsel of Curtiss-Wright he was a member of various legal organizations and served as Chair of the American Bar Association's Committee on Corporate General Counsel. Profile
TWST: Give us a bit of a background summary on Curtiss-Wright, enough

information to put us into context, what you see as your business, what

you see as your company today.

Mr. Lasky: I might