Board Matters Summer 2013

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Board

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A newsletter for current and past members of the K-State Alumni Association Board of Directors “Enhancing our Kansas State University family through lifelong involvement” Greetings! Last December I wrote what an exciting year 2013 would be! In a year where we celebrate the first 150 years of our university, we also can reflect on the incredible support and enthusiasm our Wildcat family has for the future of K-State. In academics, enrollment, athletics, philanthropy…word is out that your alma mater is experiencing tremendous success through the visionary leadership of our administration, the devotion of our faculty and staff and the ongoing support of alumni and friends. Alumni Association staff is proud to contribute to this success through programs that helped engage more than 110,000 alumni and

friends in activities this fiscal year, an increase of 13 percent over last year. Our success would not be possible without the collaborative efforts and wonderful university partnerships we share campus-wide. We also are blessed with incredible volunteer leaders who share a passion for K-State that drives our success! On behalf of the staff, I want to thank you for your continued support. I look forward to seeing you at a future event and hope you will not hesitate to contact me if there is ever anything we can do for you. Amy Button Renz ’76, ’86 President and CEO

K-State continues to strive for Top 50 ranking

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ore than four years into his tenure as president of Kansas State University, Kirk Schulz continues to provide the leadership ensuring a collaborative effort that will lead K-State to Top 50 recognition among the nation’s public research universities. Exceptional progress has been made, and efforts university-wide have equated to historic success. Highlights are many, but we have shared a few recent successes below: • K-State is the only public university with three national CASE/Carnegie Professors of the Year. This award is for excellence in undergraduate teaching. • The U.S. National Research Council has ranked K-State’s Department of Plant Pathology as the No. 1 plant pathology department in the nation. • K-State was selected as one of the next program sites for First Scholars, a national program aimed at increasing graduation rates among first-generation students. The Suder Foundation awarded the university $850,000 in funding to cover student scholarships and start-up costs to launch First Scholars on campus. • The K-State Architectural Engineering Institute Competition Team won a national championship in the electrical category of the fourth annual Charles Pankow Foundation Student Design Competition. The five categories teams compete in are building systems integration, structural, mechanical, electrical and construction management. • The College of Engineering and the College of Education were included in U.S. News & World Report’s 2014 Best Graduate School ranking, making them among the best in the nation. The College of Engineering was the only engineering graduate program in Kansas to be ranked. • For the sixth time in the past eight years, K-State’s Black Student Union has been awarded the Clarence Wine Award for Outstanding Big 12 Council of the Year. The award

SUMMER 2013

recognizes an organization that has demonstrated a serious commitment to unity, academic achievement, scholarship, campus programming and community service. • The KSU Foundation set a new record for philanthropic gifts, pledges and future commitments in the fiscal year that ended June 30. Of the $152 million total, $86 million was received in outright gifts, $33 million pledged and $33 million was committed through deferred gifts. In May, Schulz presented his goals for the next academic year to the Kansas Board of Regents. Amy Button Renz ’76, ’86 met with the president this spring to determine how best the Alumni Association could assist the needs of the university, and together they established goals for the Alumni Association, which include: • Develop a program to reach out to international students before graduation to enhance the association’s program with Nick Piper ’08 international alumni. • Invite the two Distinguished Young Alumni recipients to speak at the inaugural university convocation for freshmen to kick off the Wildcat Week of Welcome. Nick Piper ’08, founder and CEO of Phoria Energy Solutions, and Justine Sterling ’07, director of alumni relations for the George W. Bush Presidential Center, were recognized as the Justine Sterling ’07 inaugural recipients of this award in February. • Add five out-of-state alumni club dinners at spirit club locations. • Initiate planning for an additional out-of-state Wabash CannonBall to take place in 2015. • Continue to reach at least 100,000 alumni, students and friends at Association-sponsored events.


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