From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: Departments (page 14 of 16)

Alutto fills role as interim president, for second time

Joe Alutto, 2004

Joe Alutto, 2004

This week, Joseph A. Alutto begins his second term as interim president of OSU, the fifth person to fill this role for the University between administrations.

Alutto has actually worn many hats at OSU since he first arrived in 1991 as Dean of the Fisher College of Business. He came to Ohio State after spending 14 years serving as dean of the State University of New York at Buffalo School of Management. He had earned his bachelor’s degree in business administration from Manhattan College, a master’s degree in industrial relations from the University of Illinois, and a Ph.D. in organizational behavior from Cornell University.

When Alutto arrived as dean, it was known simply as the College of Business and was just starting to formulate a plan to implement a major restructuring of the college.

Early in Alutto’s tenure, the College’s name changed, after securing a $20 million gift in 1993 from OSU alumnus Max M. Fisher to help fund a $67 million, six-building complex for the College. It is now named the Max M. Fisher College of Business.

Alutto talks with Max Fisher, 1998

Alutto talks with Max Fisher, 1998

Roughly a year later, the restructuring plan was in place, calling for, among other things, new facilities, more faculty development and support, and a new emphasis on executive education.

Alutto spent the next 16 years implementing those changes, helping lift the college from a spot that was nowhere near the top 25 in national rankings, to 25th in the nation this year, according to U.S. News and World Report. Along the way, in 1998, Alutto was named Executive Dean of the professional colleges, coordinating the activities of the Colleges of Engineering; Food, Agricultural, and  Environmental Sciences; Education and Human Ecology; Law, and Social Work.

In July 2007, when then-President Karen Holbrook left OSU, Alutto took over as interim president for three months until E. Gordon Gee came on board for his second term as president, in October of that year. Shortly after, Gee tapped Alutto as Executive Vice President and Provost. Alutto served in that position until last week, when he was supposed to retire, but agreed to serve as interim president until a replacement for Gee is found.

Fisher College of Business Dedication, 1999

Fisher College of Business Dedication, 1999

Alutto is actually the fifth person in University history to serve as  interim president. In 1925, George Rightmire was interim president for a year before the Board of Trustees made him president in his own right.  Following Rightmire’s presidency (1926-1938), William McPherson was interim president for nearly two years.  McPherson was Dean of the Graduate School at the time and had actually been acting president in 1924 when President William Oxley Thompson was ill for several months.

The next interim president was J. Richard “Dick” Sisson, who held the position for six months after Gordon Gee resigned in 1997 to be president at Brown University.  Sisson was Vice President and Provost from 1993 until 1998.  Former president Edward Jennings took over for two months in 2002 between Presidents Kirwan and Holbrook.

Finally, Joseph Alutto has been interim president twice – in 2007 before Gordon Gee’s second administration and now following it. Three interim presidents, McPherson (1887), Rightmire (1895, 1898, 1926), and Sisson (1958, 1960), were also alumni of Ohio State University.

Freeman Howlett: Bringing out the horticulturist in all of us

Freeman Howlett, 1950

Freeman Howlett, 1950

This summer, the University plans to build a garden on the roof of Howlett Hall, a demonstration project for green roof design. The building’s namesake, Freeman Howlett, would have loved the idea since he spent his life finding new ways to grow plants.

Howlett, who earned his master’s and doctoral degrees from Cornell University, first joined the staff at Ohio State in 1929, conducting research at the Agricultural Experiment Station. There, he taught classes at the University’s Fruit School, an outreach project for farmers from all over the state to learn new ways to better grow crops. One such class: “Further Studies on the Water Relations of Fruit Trees.”

During his 46 year career at OSU, Howlett studied plant nutrition and growing fruits and vegetables in greenhouses, and pollination. He spoke nationally and  internationally at conferences for the organizations he was a member of, including the International Society of Horticulture, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Royal Horticultural Society in England. Howlett was also the first ever to receive the Presidential Citation of the American Society for Horticultural Science in 1963.

Howlett Hall, 1976

Howlett Hall, 1976

He also taught gardening courses throughout his career at Ohio State, even when he served as chairman of the Department of Horticulture from 1947 to 1969. He was named professor emeritus after his retirement July 1, 1970, and he died November 18, 1970, in Wooster, at the age of 70. In February, 1971 the University Trustees voted to name a building in his honor.

During his three decades as an apple breeder, he released several varieties of apples, including the Franklin (1938), the Melrose (1944), the Holiday (1964) and the Holly, which was released on the date of his retirement in June 1970. Cherry in color, it tasted like a cross between a Delicious and a Jonathan apple.

Stranger than Fiction

Herbert Atkinson, c1920

Atkinson, c1920

This April Fool’s Day, we bring you some bits of OSU history you’ll have to read about to believe!

Herbert Atkinson

Alumnus and Board of Trustee member Herbert Atkinson was so tied to the OSU campus that he requested Bricker Hall as his final resting place, and got his wish! Read more about it in a past blog post.

 

 

1981

1981

Marie the Elephant

Students often threaten to run off and join the circus, but how often do animals leave the circus for OSU? Well, Marie the elephant did. In 1981 she took ill and was transferred to the College of Veterinary Medicine’s clinic where she later died. The story just gets stranger after that! Read more about it in the transcript from then Physical Plant director Dean Ramsey’s oral history and our web exhibit for the 40th anniversary of the University Archives.

 

 

Home Ec baby, 1946

Home Ec baby, 1946

Home Ec Babies

You think your classes were stressful? Well, Home Ec students of the past were tasked with the care of a human infant, with all the responsibilities that come along with it! Read more about it in a recent blog post.

 

 

Maudine, 1926

Maudine, 1926

Queen Maudine

Perhaps one of the best pieces of OSU lore is Maudine Ormsby, the 1926 Homecoming Queen. And yes, she is the one with the spots. How did OSU end up with a cow as its Homecoming Queen? Simple: election fraud. In 1926 OSU’s student enrollment was less than 10,000, and for the election only 3,000 ballots were printed. However 12,000 votes for Homecoming Queen were submitted. Hmmmm…

Unfortunately, Maudine was unable to attend the Homecoming festivities; she was declared “too valuable” to risk an appearance. The Homecoming Committee had to settle for two boys in a cow costume.

 

Hand Grenades

Sneak preview: You’ll have to wait a few days to find out what hand grenades (but, alas, not horseshoes) had to do with track meets of old, but we think it’s worth the wait!

Filed by C.N. and L.S.

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