
When Conrad Jimison went to work at Arkansas City
Community Junior College, he figured he’d spend about three years
at the school. Thirty-seven years later, it’s obvious Jimison
became comfortable. Jimison, who began his career as agri-business
coordinator and worked his way into administration, is retiring at
the end of June. A reception was held in his honor April 28 in the
Earle N. Wright Community Room inside the Brown Center. “I didn’t
anticipate staying, and I told them that when I interviewed,” said
Jimison, a Stafford native. “I still thought I’d end up
in business some place.” That never happened. With thoughts of
using the college as a stepping stone,
Jimison actually created his own diverse career path within the college that
included eight different areas of responsibility. It included everything from
teaching to supervising the teachers. He is retiring as vice president of administration,
a position he’s held since 2002. “As you know, Conrad has been one
of my best friends ever since I got here,” said Dr. Pat McAtee, Cowley
president. “Every president needs someone as a sounding board, and Conrad
has been that person to me. This institution is what it is today because of Conrad
Jimison.” Jimison graduated from Stafford High School in 1958 and headed
to Starkville, Miss., and Mississippi State University to major in seed technology
in the school’s agronomy program. After a year, he transferred to Emporia
State University and changed his major to business. He earned a bachelor’s
degree in business administration from ESU in 1962. He married the woman he’d
known all his life, Janet Minnis, on June 10, 1962, in Stafford.
After earning his degree, Jimison went to Fort Hays State University for a year
and completed his secondary teaching certification requirements. In spring 1963,
with Janet teaching physical education in Great Bend, Jimison landed his first
teaching job. He taught American history, economics, accounting, American government
and psychology at tiny Holyrood High School, about 25 miles from Great Bend.
He earned around $4,000 that first year. “When I went into education, I
thought I’d stay three to five years, then get out,” Jimison said.
After three years at Holyrood, he became the distributive education coordinator
at Great Bend High School.
After a couple of years at Great Bend, Jimison got a call from the Kansas Department
of Education, telling him about the job opening at Cowley. “It was going
to be a partnership between business and ag teachers,” Jimison said. During
the summer of 1968, with his wife and two young children in tow, Jimison left
Great Bend, a new house, and the convenience of being just 35 miles from Stafford
for a place he didn’t know much about: Arkansas City.
On Aug. 1, 1968, Jimison began his career at Cowley. Equipped with a business
background, he teamed with Rich Tredway, who brought a farm background, to build
the college’s agri-business program. Jimison and Tredway spent nearly 15
years together building the college’s agri-business program. That included
constantly updating curriculum and developing new ways to do things. In August
1969, Jimison earned a master’s degree from ESU. In 1977, a third instructor,
Larry Schwintz, was added to expand the program into production agriculture.
However, the agriculture industry as a whole was hit hard during that period,
and it wasn’t long before Jimison changed jobs at the college. “I
did a little grant work and evening and continuing education work,” Jimison
said. That preceded a move to become the college’s registrar and director
of continuing education, a position Jimison held until 1988, Dr. Pat McAtee’s
second year as president. Continuing education occupied most of Jimison’s
time for the next eight years. He served as director of continuing education
from 1988-89, then was named associate dean of continuing education, a title
he held from 1989 to 1996. For the 1996-97 academic year, Jimison was the college’s
associate dean of instruction. He became dean of instruction in fall 1997, then
vice president of instruction during the 2000-2001 academic year.
What sustained Jimison for nearly four decades at Cowley were the relationships
he’s built with colleagues. “You always have to come back to the
people,” Jimison said when asked what has been most rewarding working at
Cowley. “It was really satisfying to work in the ag program. Industry was
calling us and asking for students to go to work. In continuing education, it
was the same thing. The contacts you have with people and seeing students be
successful, that was very satisfying.”
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