Hilda Jones remembered as professional in classroom, proud rooter for Beavers

Hilda Jones was a woman who exuded the prim, proper professionalism expected of working women in the era following World War II, but who also knew how to let it out when supporting her Beaver sports teams.

Most of all, the former Oregon State College of Business professor was a positive influence on a generation of women who came through Bexell Hall.

Jones passed away in July at the age of 94.

A graduate of Newberg High School and then Oregon State College, Jones earned a master’s degree in business from New York University in the 1940s. She married Robert Dean Jones in 1947, and later, the couple settled in Corvallis where Jones began teaching in the College of Business secretarial science department

Connie Palmer, a former colleague of Jones in the late 1960s, remembered Jones’ high standards in the classroom and her refusal to accept anything less from her students.

“She was an old-school perfectionist teacher,” Palmer said. “She was the best shorthand teacher I’ve ever known. No matter how much you didn’t like her, you learned from her.”

Jones enforced a business-like code in her class, expecting each student to come prepared as if they were entering a real office. Up until the 1970s, a student without a skirt could be sent home.

“Hilda and I were the last ones to wear pantsuits,” Palmer remembered with a laugh.

During the late 1970s Jones was part of a transition as the college moved away from secretarial classes. At that time Jones was a writing instructor for the College of Business, working with professors to insert writing assignments into courses.

Jane Siebler was a graduate teaching assistant for Jones in 1978-79, helping her grade writing assignments.

“She was a great lady,” Sieber said. “She was just one of those together women that kept going and blazing her trail.”

While Sieber said outwardly Jones was very traditional, the professor did everything she could to make sure women at the college could advance and succeed.

“It was a real different world and Hilda and Pat Wells, there were some professors helping women get on their feet,” Sieber said. “She quietly and in her own way supported female students.”

Despite her distinguished teaching career, Jones may have been most known as a loyal Beaver fan, both attending games and contributing to the Beaver Athletic Scholarship Fund.

While she was all business in Bexell Hall, those same rules didn’t apply while attending football and basketball games.

“She was an avid Beaver fan,” Palmer said. “They had to be sick to miss a game.”

Sieber said it was always fun to see Jones let loose while cheering on OSU.

“She dressed very professionally, acted very professionally, then she went to games and was a different person,” she said.

According to the Corvallis Gazette-Times, the family suggests donations in Jones’ name to the Benton County Historical Society, Albany Regional Museum, First United Methodist Church, the Jackson Street Youth Shelter, the Linn-Benton Community College Foundation or a charity of choice.

 

New feature stories: Two CoB faculty members retiring

Carol Brown is recognized at the Celebration of Achievement
Carol Brown is recognized at the Celebration of Achievement
Retiring professor Jack Drexler MCs the Celebration of Achievement
Retiring professor Jack Drexler MCs the Celebration of Achievement

Quick post today to let you know about some new feature stories over at the main College of Business home page.

At the end of this month two great faculty members, Carol Brown and Jack Drexler, will be retiring. Carol started as an instructor of accounting in 1978, she’s currently Dean for Academic Programs, and Jack began as an associate professor of management in 1985, currently serving as Associate Dean for Faculty.

Each had a unique path to Oregon State — Jack holds a Ph.D. in psychology from The University of Michigan and Carol a Ph.D. in computer science (which she earned while teaching at Oregon State) — and each had a tremendous impact while part of the College of Business. Congratulations to both.

College of Business honors faculty, staff at Celebration of Achievement

Celebration of Achievement award winners
Celebration of Achievement award winners

The College of Business hosted its annual Celebration of Achievement Friday, recognizing a number of faculty and staff members who contributed to the success of the college over the past year.

Before the first awards were handed out, Dean Ilene Kleinsorge took a moment to honor Jack Drexler and Carol Brown, who are retiring at the end of the year. The pair take nearly 60 years of experience at OSU with them.

Carol Brown is recognized at the Celebration of Achievement
Carol Brown is recognized at the Celebration of Achievement
Retiring professor Jack Drexler MCs the Celebration of Achievement
Retiring professor Jack Drexler MCs the Celebration of Achievement

The dean also recognized Leslie Burns, chair of the Department of Human Environment, which will become part of the College of Business next school year. A number of DHE faculty and staff attended the celebration this year to start off the process.

Of course, the purpose of the night was a chance for everyone in the college to get together, celebrate another great year and especially the award recipients. Here are the honorees for 2011-12

Wide shot of the award presentations at the Celebration of Achievement
Celebration of Achievement

Betty and Forrest Simmons Excellence in Graduate Teaching Award: Nancy King.

This award was established two years ago by a generous gift from Betty and Forrest Simmons who wanted to ensure a strong MBA program in the college

Graduate students called Nancy King “an outstanding professor of business law.” King teaches Law and Ethics for New Ventures and Emerging Technologies and understands how the industry and technologies change to create relevant class projects and prepare students for their Integrated Business Project within their MBA program.

Byron L. Newton Award – Excellence in Teaching: René Reitsma

Established by the faculty in 1976, the award honors excellence in classroom teaching. The award is named in honor of a professor who was a member of the faculty from 1947 to 1975.

Rene Reitsma provides experiential learning opportunities to students through the system analysis and design courses. He’s worked with Byron Marshall to secure a COE and COB grant to design an IT bootcamp, which will launch in fall 2013.

Excellence in Scholarship Award: Michelle Barnhart

Since joining the faculty in 2009, Michelle has garnered three publications including two in the Journal of Consumer Research and one in the Journal of Business Research.

Outstanding Professional Faculty & Staff Service Award: Alan Sprague

In addition to being an invaluable technical resource to the College of Business, Alan Sprague implemented the Virtual Desktop Infrastructure technology in the computer lab, classroom and among office users.

Experiential Learning Award – Carrie Kolstad- Hertel

As the manager for the Business Solutions Group testing group, Carrie Kolstad-Hertel represents the best of the experiential learning opportunities available through BSG. She has worked through the full-cycle of the BSG experiential learning process from student worker to professional faculty to manager with responsibility of hiring and training student workers and other professional faculty.

College Service Award Recipient: Byron Marshall

As the faculty advisor for the BIS student organization, SIM Club, Byron Marshall has spent countless hours assisting students with IT skills and projects. More than that, Byron organized field trips, meetings with IT professionals, BIS events and even identified student volunteers for BIS presentations in Corvallis high schools.

Byron took the lead in having the Accounting Information System program endorsed by leading organizations and recertified. It’s now one of only 18 such programs world wide to have this recognition.

College Service Outreach Award:  Mark Van Patten

As the founder and chair of the Willamette Innovators Network, Mark Van Patten has helped foster leadership and cooperation within an expanding network of entrepreneurs, business leaders and government organizations.

Mark also serves on the Advisor Council for the Portland Chapter of the Society of Information Managers and is part of National Engineering and IT month and a Board Member for the BIS Advisory Council.

Newcomb Faculty Endowment Awards:Newcomb Fellows

The Newcomb Fellowships were established by Bernie Newcomb, Class of ’65, and co-founder of E*Trade.  His generous endowment makes it possible for us to recognize outstanding contributions to the mission, vision, and strategic development of the College of Business.

John Becker-Blease

In the fall John Becker-Blease received the Aspen Institute’s Rising Star Award. John’s curriculum development has made a significant impact in the way that students are taught how finance impacts business and the integration of social, environmental and economic issues.

Kim Calder

Kim Calder, the college’s faculty services coordinator, is the person who keeps Bexell Hall standing every day. From ordering text books, to copying exams to assisting with research projects and from data collection processing for accreditation to having students move offices, put together furniture and paint our dear Bexell Hall, Kim makes sure that tasks are completed and the environment we work is as accommodating and functioning as it can be.

Jared Moore

Jared Moore was instrumental in mentoring accounting teams to top-two finishes at the Berntson Porter/University of Washington Tax Competition and this year leading a team of accounting students to a first place finish in the 2012 Foster School of Business Master of Professional Accounting Tax Case Competition.

Media Mentions: Predicting the crash, tracking your data

A summary of where College of Business faculty, students and alumni are getting attention out in the world.

Something we missed or you’d like to see mentioned on the blog? Email COB storyteller Chris Hagan at chris.hagan at bus.oregonstate.edu or leave a comment on this post.

Finance professor Dave Berger was recognized for a new paper looking at how to predict when global stock markets might decline:

Professor Nancy King was quoted in a New York Times story looking at how personal data get shared between companies:

King also took part in a panel at the Orange and Black Evening in Portland. Check out the Facebook page for the OSU Alumni Association for some photos from the event.

This month was also the first-ever TEDx event hosted by Oregon State, which was organized by OSU MBA candidate Jennifer Villalobos. The Gazette-Times had a story and photos on the talks: