Kansas
State University achievements
2005
Students
*
A mechanical engineering student at K-State has been selected
to participate in the annual Society of Automotive Engineers Leadership
Development Program. Senior Adam Ewing, Manhattan, is one of only
25 students nationwide selected for this program. The Society
of Automotive Engineers Leadership Development Program is a new
offering for younger members of the society and is a part of the
society's Power Track, a pathway designed to help accelerate participants'
careers. Ewing was nominated by David Pacey, professor of mechanical
and nuclear engineering and adviser to the K-State chapter of
the Society of Automotive Engineers. Pacey said he recommended
Ewing due to his leadership skills exhibited through involvement
in K-State's chapter. Ewing serves as both chapter vice president
and as the team leader for K-State's Formula SAE race team. The
focus of the leadership program is to further develop important
skills as a leader in the society and the mobility industries,
and foster relationships between professional and student chapters
of the society. December 2005
*
Six students from the College of Architecture, Planning and Design
had a special role in an episode of ABC's "Extreme Makeover:
Home Edition" program. The six designed an outbuilding --
a chicken house with a chicken run -- for the Rose Hill family
receiving the home makeover on the show. Around 200 of the college's
students and faculty also served as volunteers for the makeover
project, helping with construction of the new home. The episode
is scheduled to air Jan. 8, 2006, on ABC. December 2005
*
Patricia Dozier, K-State doctoral student in special education,
Junction City, has received an award and $4,200 scholarship from
the Donald D. Hammill Foundation, which specializes in special
education. She received the scholarship for her dissertation,
"How do secondary students feel about the co-teaching strategy?"
Co-teaching is an approach where two teachers, one general education
and one special education, teach a group or class of students
together. The results of Dozier's study showed students valued
the fairness of the classes, no one was called on more than others
and having a second teacher offered more help plus another way
to learn. December 2005
*
Patrice Holderbach, senior in print journalism and international
studies, is K-State's 10th Marshall Scholarship recipient. The
scholarship has an estimated value of around $70,000 and provides
full funding to support two years of study at any university in
the United Kingdom. Holderbach is considering attending Oxford
University or the University of Sussex with her Marshall Scholarship.
Her ambition is to be a journalist who specializes in covering
international events dealing with ethnic conflicts. K-State ranks
third in Marshall Scholarship winners among the nation's 500 public
universities. November 2005
*
The Sexual Health Awareness Peer Educators, a student organization
sponsored by Lafene Health Center, received the Outstanding Network
Affiliate Award at the recent general assembly of The BACCHUS
Network in Orlando, Fla. The award recognizes outstanding work
dealing with health and safety issues on college and university
campuses. The K-State program provides sexual health peer education
to student living groups, organizations and formal classes associated
with K-State. November 2005
*
The K-State Collegiate Crops Team won the Kansas City Board of
Trade Collegiate Crops Contest and placed second at the Chicago
Collegiate Crops Contest Nov. 15 and 18, respectively. K-State
placed first in grain grading and second in seed analysis and
plant and seed identification at Kansas City. The team placed
first in plant and seed identification and second in grain grading
and seed analysis at Chicago. The team is coached by Gerry Posler,
K-State professor of agronomy. November 2005.
*A
K-State student has won first place for a paper presentation at
the recent Applied Geography Conference in Washington, D.C. Darci
Paull, graduate student in geography, Kanopolis, presented the
paper, "The Effectiveness of Rural Communities' Strategies
to Reverse Depopulation." November 2005
*A
team of K-State Army ROTC cadets placed fourth in the Cadet Command
11th Brigade Ranger Challenge, a military skills and leadership
competition, Saturday, Oct. 29, at Camp Dodge, Iowa. Fifteen teams
from nine colleges competed in the challenge. K-State's Team A
placed fourth in the competition. November 2005
*Three
K-State Army ROTC students have been selected by the Department
of the Army for education delays. The students will be able to
complete a two-year graduate program before being commissioned
to the Army. This is a highly competitive selection process. Among
272 schools that host Army ROTC pre-professional programs, K-State
ranks first with Boston University, Cornell University and John
Hopkins University for the most graduating officers selected for
advanced education and service this year. November 2005
*A
recent K-State graduate has received the Wildlife Disease Association's
Graduate Student Research Recognition Award. Tammi Johnson, a
May 2005 graduate with a master's in biology, Thermopolis, Wyo.,
received the award at the 54th annual meeting of the Wildlife
Disease Association in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Johnson
was recognized by the association for her presentation "Landscape
Predictors for the Spread of Disease in a Colonial Mammal: Sylvatic
Plague in Black-tailed Prairie Dogs." The award was given
to the student who had the best research project in the field
of wildlife disease based on written communication and scientific
achievement. November 2005.
*
Corey Schneider, a fourth-year student in architecture, Salina,
received the Merit Award for Student Architecture from the Kansas
chapter of the American Institute of Architects for his "American
Museum of the Piano." Schneider worked on the project in
the spring for a studio class taught by Larry Bowne, K-State assistant
professor of architecture. The award was presented at the American
Institute of Architects Kansas/American Institute of Architects
Central States Regional Conference in September in Overland Park.
October 2005
*
Jennifer West, fifth-year senior in interior architecture and
product design, Topeka, was selected to share a $5,000 scholarship
from the Kansas City chapter of the International Facilities Management
Association with four other recipients. At K-State, West has been
recognized for delineation, home design, graphic design and speech.
October 2005
*
April Hammond Bilbrey, a May 2005 bachelor's graduate in textiles,
Larned, has won the 2005 Outstanding Textile Graduate award from
the American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists. The
award is based on academic performance and involvement in student
activities. Elizabeth McCullough, professor of apparel, textiles
and interior design, nominated Bilbrey, who was chosen out of
21 chapter winners from across the country. Bilbrey was eligible
for this award after winning the Outstanding Undergraduate Student
in Textiles Award from the American Association of Textile Chemists
and Colorists. October 2005
*
Eric Castle, Cedar Hills, Utah, a graduate student in landscape
architecture, was one of three winners in the first Dangermond
Fellowship, which recognizes the innovative use of geographic
information systems in landscape assessment and intervention.
Castle's project studies using GIS and hydrologic technologies
to design and plan better watersheds. The fellowship includes
$10,000 and a computer. October 2005
*
John Anderson, junior in biology from Valley Center, has received
a $7,500 STAR Trainee Award from the Kansas IDeA Network of Biomedical
Research Excellence. The scholarship is for research in his senior
year and provides support during his first year of graduate school.
The STAR Trainee Award program identifies outstanding prospective
biomedical researchers in their senior year at a Kansas university.
September 2005
*Two
members of K-State's chapter of Beta Theta Pi fraternity have
received John J. and Elizabeth Rhodes scholarships. The two received
their awards at the Beta Theta Pi general convention in Scottsdale,
Ariz., in August. Both Andrew Maher, junior in accounting, and
Daniel Nesbitt, senior in accounting and pre-law, received $800
scholarships. September 2005
*
Xin Zhao, graduate student in horticulture, received an American
Society for Horticultural Science travel award to attend the society's
recent 2005 annual conference in Las Vegas, Nev. Zhao's poster,
"Influences of fertilizer source and insecticide application
on phenolic compounds in pac choi (Brasic rapa L.)," received
second place in the graduate student poster competition. Posters
were judged on display appearance, poster organization, substantive
merit, novelty and the student's enthusiasm for their study and
competence in the subject area. September 2005
*
Thomas Pollock, senior in mechanical engineering, was awarded
a Society of Automotive Engineering Long Term Member Sponsored
Scholarship. Pollock, from De Soto, was one of six worldwide recipients
of the scholarship. He will receive a $1,000 nonrenewable scholarship
from the international society. The scholarship recognizes outstanding
student members who actively support the society and its activities.
September 2005
*
K-State's chapter of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity has received the
Top Chapter Award from the fraternity for the sixth time in the
last eight years. The honor was presented at the fraternity's
2005 awards banquet in Indianapolis. Other honors the chapter
received included the Joseph R. Anderson Gold Award for most outstanding
communications; the True Merit Award, presented to the 21 most
outstanding Alpha Tau Omega chapters; the Alpha Tau Omega Roadshow
National Award; the Ross Impact Special Mention Award for outstanding
social service; and the Excellence in Scholarship Award for a
chapter grade point average above 3.0 for the school year. September
2005
*Tony
Grace, graduate student in entomology, was awarded the Lillian
and Alex Feir Graduate Student Travel Award in Insect Physiology,
Biochemistry or Molecular Biology from the Entomological Society
of America section B. The award includes a $1,000 cash prize and
a certificate. It was the third national award Grace has received
this year. September 2005
*Two
Kansas State University graduate students were honored at the
Society for Invertebrate Pathology annual meeting in Anchorage,
Alaska. Chanitchote Detvisitsakun, graduate student in genetics
and biology, placed second for her oral presentation. Detvisitsakun
also was awarded the Mauro Martignoni Student Travel Award in
support of her research on viral pathogenesis. Jayne Christen,
graduate student in entomology, received an honorable mention
for her oral presentation. This marks the second year in a row
for K-State students to be honored for their presentations and
receive the Martingnoni award. August 2005.
*
Students from K-State's biological and agricultural engineering
department earned five top-three awards in student competitions
at the International American Society of Agricultural Engineers
meeting July 17-20 in Tampa, Fla. K-State students received both
the first- and second-place awards in the K.K. Barnes Student
Paper Competition. Twelve papers were submitted nationally for
the competition, which encourages undergraduate students in the
preparation of better technical papers on subjects in the agricultural,
food or biological engineering field. The K-State Fountain Wars
team placed second in a field of five teams in its competition.
Fountain Wars is a hands-on, real-time design competition where
students design and model their entry beforehand but build and
test the actual entry during the competition. Once completed,
each fountain was tested for its ability to efficiently launch
a tennis ball the greatest horizontal distance and complete an
obstacle course that required three different uses of a jet of
water to extinguish a torch, move a full 2-liter soda bottle,
and knock over an empty soda can. K-State also had one of three
finalists for the Gunlogson Student Environment Design Competition,
which encourages undergraduate students to participate in the
design of a relevant engineering project and to provide an arena
of professional competition for environmentally and biologically
related design projects. One K-State graduate student received
second place in the Graduate Student Research Award, which recognizes
excellence in the conduct and presentation of research to build
the knowledge base needed by engineers who design equipment. The
K-State Agricultural Technology Management Club received third-pace
honors in the Outstanding Agricultural Mechanization Club Competition.
The clubs were judged based upon the most outstanding record of
activities and accomplishments in the previous year in areas including
membership, committees, meetings, attendance, programs, special
member activities, inspection trips and publications. July 2005
*
Randy Regier, a summa cum laude graduate of K-State in May 2003
with a bachelor's in fine arts, is among the 10 recipients of
a 2005 Jack Kent Gooke Foundation Graduate Scholarship for the
fine or performing arts. Regier will use the scholarship, worth
up to $50,000 ayear for up to six years, for his graduate studies
at the Maine College of Art. Regier staged a popular exhibition
at the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art in fall 2003, "Everything
Must Go: The Toys of Randy Regier." July 2005
*
The Federal Communication Commission has renewed the broadcast
license of K-State's student radio station, KSDB-FM. The current
license period lasts through 2012. KSDB was first licensed in
November 1948 and is one of the longest-operating educational
FM radio stations in the country. KSDB-FM, the Wildcat 91.9, is
K-State's student-run radio station. Since 1999, the station's
staff has been recognized with more than 120 awards by the Kansas
Association of Broadcasters for news, sports, creativity and performance.
The station is operated by the A. Q. Miller School of Journalism
and Mass Communications and partially funded by K-State Student
Privilege Fees. July 2005
*
Meredith Martin, Hanover, a K-State senior in mechanical engineering,
won a Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship, worth up to
$5,000 for study abroad in fall 2005. The Gilman International
Scholarship Program offers a competition for awards for undergraduate
study abroad and was established by the International Academic
Opportunity Act of 2000. June 2005
*
Two K-State students specializing in greenhouse management have
been awarded Joseph Shinoda Memorial Scholarships for the 2005-06
academic year. Matt Novak, senior in horticulture, Modoc, will
receive a $2,000 scholarship; Natalie Thomas, senior in horticulture,
Riley, will receive a $3,000 scholarship. The scholarship foundation
is a non-profit organization dedicated to ensuring the continued
success of the commercial floriculture industry through encouraging
creative young students to pursue careers in floriculture. June
2005
*
Two K-State industrial engineering graduate students were selected
to participate in the NASA Graduate Student Research Program at
the Kennedy Space Center in summer 2005. Nyla Polli, Leavenworth,
and Brandon Evans, Rose Hill, will each receive $24,000 as part
of the one-year program, with an opportunity for renewal. The
students were chosen based on their project proposals, which dealt
with expendable launch vehicles operations rockets, for
example. David Ben-Arieh, K-State professor of industrial and
manufacturing systems engineering, helped with the project proposals.
Polli and Evans worked at the Kennedy Space Center last summer
on a project with Ben-Arieh. The program supports approximately
300 graduate students nationwide annually; this year only eight
were chosen to work at Kennedy Space Center. NASA's discipline
scientists and technologists evaluate applications based on academic
transcripts, research proposal, faculty research adviser's recommendation
and the proposed utilization of the NASA Center or university
research facilities. June 2005
*
The K-State Powercat Tractors Team continued its outstanding record
by finishing second in the eighth annual American Society of Agricultural
Engineers International Quarter-Scale Tractor Student Design Competition,
June 2-5 in Moline, Ill. The K-State team, made up of undergraduates
in biological and agricultural engineering and agricultural technology
management, is the only team to place in the top three, including
four firsts, continuously since 1999. The competition began in
1998. Entries were judged in four areas -- overall quality of
design, oral report presentation, written report, and maneuverability
and pulling performance. Up against 26 teams from around the country
and world, the 14-member K-State team took first in two of the
four pulling competitions, second in the written report, third
in design ergonomics and sixth in the oral presentation. June
2005
*
Laura Beth Bienhoff, a May 2005 graduate in chemical engineering,
Kensington, has been named the Society of Women Engineers Board
of Directors Collegiate Representative. This is the inaugural
year of the two-year pilot position. Bienhoff will participate
in all board of director activities as a non-voting member. The
collegiate member must be a student member or a first-year graduate
member when their term starts. June 2005
*
Julie (Quackenbush) Heaser, Salina, a K-State graduate, received
a national Homeland Security Scholars and Fellows Program scholarship
intended to develop future scientists in fields vital to homeland
security. Heaser graduated from K-State with honors in December
2004 with a bachelor's degree in industrial engineering with an
economics minor. The scholarship will cover Heaser's 2005-2006tuition
and fees in graduate school and provide a $27,600 stipend. She
also will spend an eight-week to 10-week internship with a federally
affiliated agency that deals with homeland security. The scholarship
is coordinated by the Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education.
June 2005
*
K-State's Sensory Analysis team won an international award for
a test they designed to see what sensory attributes are important
to people over 50 years of age. The team received first place
in the Elaine Skinner Sensory Design competition, sponsored by
Sensory Spectrum. The competition challenged teams to put themselves
in the place of sensory experts with an innovation team employed
by a company looking to develop a snack for adults 50 years of
age and older. Sensory analysis includes understanding products
in terms of their appearance, aroma/fragrance, flavor, texture,
feeling and sound.The K-State team shared $5,000 in scholarships
for winning the competition. May 2005
*
Chris Weber, Claflin, May 2005 graduate in electrical and computer
engineering at K-State, was named one of five finalists for the
Alton B. Zerby and Carl T. Koerner Outstanding Electrical or Computer
Engineering Student Award issued by Eta Kappa Nu, a national honor
society for electrical and computer engineering students. Weber's
selection identifies him as one of the five most outstanding electrical
engineering students in the nation. Each year, K-State's chapter
of Eta Kappa Nu nominates one senior for the award. This marks
the second straight year a nominee from K-State has been selected
as a national finalist. Weber, president of K-State's Eta Kappa
Nu chapter, plans to attend the formal banquet ceremony that will
recognize the winner of the award in Los Angeles in fall 2005.
Started in 1965, the award recognizes outstanding scholastic excellence
and high moral character, coupled with demonstrated exemplary
service to classmates, university, community and country. The
program is administered by the Los Angeles Area Alumni Chapter.
May 2005
*
A first-year graduate student in K-State's Master of Business
Administration program has been selected by the Association for
Canadian Studies in the United States to participate in a week-long
seminar at the University of Ottawa in Ontario, Canada. Jordan
Zimbelman is one of 25 students from MBA programs across the United
States invited to participate in this all expenses paid experience.
The program will take place the week of June 5 and will involve
briefings by Canadian political and business leaders and company
visits in both Ottawa and Montreal. May 2005
*
Two seniors in K-State's biological and agricultural engineering
program have received national awards from the American Society
of Agricultural Engineers. Trisha Culbertson, senior in biological
and agricultural engineering, New Strawn, has been awarded the
American Society of Agricultural Engineers Student of the Year
Award for 2005. This $1,000 honor is given to the outstanding
engineering undergraduate student in the United States and Canada.
Criteria for the award includes scholarship excellence, outstanding
character, personal development, student membership in the American
Society of Agricultural Engineers and leadership qualities. She
is the fourth K-State winner of the honor in the past seven years.
Amy Good, senior in biological and agricultural engineering, Oakley,
has been awarded the American Society of Agricultural Engineers
Merriam scholarship. This $1,000 award is presented to a student
in biological or agricultural engineering with an emphasis in
soil and water. She is the third K-State winner in the award's
five-year history. Over the past seven years, K-State students
have won more than one-third of the national American Society
of Agricultural Engineers scholarships. May 2005
*
A team of mechanical engineering students from K-State placed
third in the 2005 Society of Automotive Engineers' Aero Design
West competition. Armed with their new airplane, LoadStar, the
team competed against an international field of more than 30 engineering,
aviation and technology schools April 22-24 in Fort Worth, Texas.
The radio-controlled airplane made of foam, carbon fiber and balsa
was required to weigh in at less than 10 pounds. During the flight
portion of the competition, LoadStar lifted 21.7 pounds of payload
off the ground, made a 360-degree flight pattern and landed. Two
other parts of the contest involved a design report book, and
an oral presentation. Participating in the event for the fifth
time, this year's finish matched a previous best third-place finish
in 2003 at Aero Design East. This was the first time the team
had competed in Open Class. May 2005
*
The K-State Horse Judging Team took first place at the Middle
Tennessee State University contest April 1. Eight K-State students
competed in two teams. One student competed individually. Team
A placed third in Halter, first in Performance, first in Reasons
and first overall. Team B placed first in Halter, second in Performance,
second in Reasons and third overall. Members of the K-State Horse
Judging Team also placed individually. May 2005
*
Clarisse Sjoquist, K-State graduate student in apparel and textiles,
received first place for her original purse design in the American
Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists Concept to Consumer
2005 Design Competition. The theme of the competition was "Carry-All"
and the contest was divided into three categories: technical,
aesthetic and textile design. Sjoquist received the award for
her aesthetic design "Fusion
the purse with no limitations."
The purse is designed specifically for women who use wheelchairs.
Sjoquist will receive a $1,000 award and a complimentary student
registration for the American Association of Textile Chemists
and Colorists International Conference and Exhibition in October
where her design will be featured. May 2005
*
Armed with a laptop computer and their knowledge of financial
planning, K-State's financial planning team beat out all other
teams in the nation at the American Express Collegiate Financial
Planning Competition, April 13-16, in Minneapolis. This marks
the third time K-State has won the national championship -- which
brings $10,000 in scholarship money to the university. This is
the sixth year in a row K-State has made it to the finals.
More than 40 teams entered the competition, but only eight were
chosen to compete in the finals. K-State's financial planning
team includes Ramona Arnold and Chris Gasken, both of Junction
City, and Marc Shaffer, Topeka. The students are all seniors in
family studies and human services and have been working together
since November to prepare for the competition. At the finals,
the team gave a 20-minute client presentation to a panel of industry
experts based on a 100-page, comprehensive financial plan they
had previously submitted for a fictitious family. Although the
team members each get an individual prize of $750, the team spent
an estimated 120 hours preparing for the competition. April 2005
*
K-State students swept the Kansas Association of Broadcasters
student awards competition, with 19 television production awards
and 28 awards in radio for student radio station KSDB-FM. On the
radio side, KSDB-FM won first place in all divisions but two.
April 2005
*
Student editors of K-State's student newspaper and yearbook, the
Collegian and Royal Purple, accepted Gold Crown awards for both
publications during the 27th annual College Media Advisers Convention,
sponsored by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association March 19
in New York City. The 2004 Royal Purple was one of only four college
yearbooks to take home a Gold Crown Award, an honor that followed
its first-place Best in Show award at College Media Advisers'
November convention in Nashville, Tenn. Both the fall 2003 and
spring 2004 Collegians received Gold Crown awards. K-State was
the only school in the nation to receive three Gold Crowns. This
was K-State's second year in a row to receive all three. April
2005
*
K-State graduate students in entomology earned awards at the 60th
Annual Entomological Society of America-North Central Branch Meeting
March 20-23.
Five
graduate students won awards for their research presentations
at the meeting, the highest number of any institution represented
at the meeting. April 2005
*
April Hammond Bilbrey, K-State senior in textiles, Larned, received
the Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Textiles Award from the
American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists. Bilbrey
was selected for the national award based on university involvement,
leadership roles and outstanding work in textile science or textile
chemistry throughout her time at K-State. With the award, Bilbrey
received a one-year membership to the association and two books.
She also was recognized in both the association's national publication
and the Web site. Bilbrey has been an active member of K-State's
chapter of the American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists
and has been secretary of the organization for two years. Each
collegiate chapter of the association nominates one student for
this national award. Bilbrey was nominated for the award by Elizabeth
McCullough, professor of apparel, textiles and interior design.
The award also places Bilbrey in the running for the Association
of Textile Chemists and Colorists Outstanding College Graduate
of the Year award, which will be announced at the international
conference and exhibition in fall 2005. April 2005
*
One current and one recently graduated engineering student from
Kansas State University have received National Science Foundation
Graduate Research Fellowships. The fellowship awards a $30,000
stipend and a $10,500 cost-of-education allowance per year for
three years of education, totaling about $120,000 over three years
for students pursuing research-based master's or doctoral degrees
in an engineering or science discipline. April 2005
*
The K-State Crops Team won the North American Colleges and Teachers
of Agriculture Crops Contest April 15 in Norfolk, Neb. The team
has won this title six times in the last seven years. This year,
the team placed first in plant and seed identification and agronomic
calculations and second in laboratory practical and agronomic
quiz. April 2005
*
Two K-State interior design students received top awards for their
designs in the 2005 Brass Ring Awards, a national exhibition of
student design sponsored annually by Oklahoma Christian University.
Jessica Richardson, Andover, junior in interior design, placed
second in the corporate design division. She also received a Silver
Best of Show Award. Richardson's design consisted of an alternative
corporate office space for a London-based exporter of Argentinean
wines. Amy Gowens, Wichita, senior in interior design, placed
first in the corporate and health care divisions for her interior
designs of a wine exporter's headquarters and a pediatric center.
She also received a Gold Best of Show award. The competition included
more than 800 entries from students at 30 schools and universities.
Both Gowens and Richardson entered their designs under the direction
of Migette Kaup, K-State assistant professor of apparel, textiles
and interior design. April 2005
*
Jessica Heier, Quinter, was named a Phi Kappa Phi Graduate Fellowship
winner for 2005. The fellowship provides three years of support
for graduate study leading to research-based master's or doctoral
degrees in engineering or science disciplines. She will receive
a $30,000 stipend and a $10,500 cost-of-education allowance (tuition
and fees) per year during three of the next five years. Heier,
a December 2004 K-State graduate in industrial engineering with
a music minor, plans to earn a Ph.D. in industrial engineering
and to pursue a career in teaching, research and service at a
university. The K-State Phi Kappa Phi honor society has an impressive
record in this competition. Since 1986, K-State has had 18 winners,
a total matched only by Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah.
April 2005
*
K-State students Jenna Tajchman, Danielle Richardsonand Adrienne
Stolwyk have claimed three of the 38 Phi Kappa Phi Study/Internship
Abroad Grants awarded nationally this year. The $1,000 awards
recognize and assist undergraduates seeking knowledge abroad.
K-State students have won 11 Phi Kappa Phi study abroad grants
since they were created four years ago. April 2005
*
The K-State Forensics Team beat out 90 other teams to place seventh
in the 28th Annual American Forensics Association National Individual
Events Tournament April 1-4 at K-State. Twelve students from K-State
competed with more than 700 students from 97 colleges and universities
throughout the country. Of those 12 students, seven made it past
the initial rounds in their events. Four reached the quarter finals,
one reached the semi-finals, and two made it to the final rounds
and placed in their events. April 2005
*
K-State's Steel Bridge Team placed second out of 11 teams at the
Mid-Continent Regional Conference of the American Society of Civil
Engineers March 31-April 2, in Edwardsville, Ill. By placing second,
the team also earned a spot in the national competition for the
first time since 2000. Between 40 and 50 steel bridge teams from
across the country will compete in the national competition May
27-28, in Orlando, Fla. The K-State Steel Bridge Team's bridge
was judged in three categories: weight, construction time and
deflection. Deflection measures how much the bridge moves when
it is supporting weight. April 2005
*
A K-State graduate student has been awarded a $9,850 grant from
the National Science Foundation. Mary Dobbs, graduate student
in geography and native of Great Bend, received the grant to assist
with her doctoral dissertation research. Dobbs will look at the
economic impact of the Conservation Reserve Program on farm households.
March 2005
*
A K-State graduate student was selected to present his research
at the 2005 International Association for Food Protection Annual
Meeting, Aug. 17, in Baltimore, Md. David Olds, a doctoral student
in hotel, restaurant, institution management and dietetics, Manhattan,
presented "Influence of Four Retail Foodservice Cooling Methods
on the Behavior of Clostridium Perfringens ATCC 10388 in Turkey
Roasts Following Heating to an Internal Temperature of 74 degrees
C." Olds' research focused on microbiological growth in cooked
turkeys. To examine the effect on turkeys, he used four different
cooling methods. March 2005
*
Victoria Luhrs, a senior in secondary education and history,is
Kansas State University's 28th winner of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship.
With her win of the $30,000 scholarship, K-State remains first
in the nation among public universities and seventh in the nation
among all universities public and private in producing
Truman scholars since the scholarship competition began in 1977.
March 2005
*
Four Kansas State University students -- David Thompson, Mike
Higgins, Meg Fasulo and Matt Basel -- have been awarded $7,500
Barry M. Goldwater Scholarships. K-State students have now won
53 Goldwater Scholarships since the program began in 1989. K-State
is ranked first in the nation among all 500 four-year state universities
in the number of Goldwater winners. Including both the 500 public
schools and 1,500 private colleges and universities in the nation,
only Princeton, Harvard and Duke have produced more Goldwater
scholars. March 2005
*
Trisha Culbertson has become K-State's 13th Udall scholar. Culbertson,
senior in biological and agricultural engineering, is also a member
of K-State's cross country and track teams. The $5,000 scholarship
honors Morris K. Udall, a former congressman from Arizona, for
his legacy of public service. Mark Ruzicka, junior in landscape
architecture, has received a $500 honorable mention in the Udall
competition. March 2005
*
K-State students finished first and second in the Big 12 in the
Putnam Mathematical Competition. The Mathematical Association
of America released the results of the prestigious William Lowell
Putnam Mathematical Competition and K-State's Matthew Burkemper,
a senior mathematics major from Derby, ranked 44th among the 3,733
students in the competition. Jeffrey Amos, a junior in mathematics
and computer science from Olathe, ranked 69th in the competition.
These were the first and second best performances by students
in the Big 12 Conference and among the best performances ever
by a K-Stater. Other K-State students who did well in the competition
include Manhattan residents Jonathan Whitmer, a senior in mathematics
and physics, ranked in the top 22 percent; Michael Higgins, a
senior in mathematics and statistics, ranked in the top 30 percent;
and Adam Gelroth, a junior in mathematics, ranked in the top 37
percent; Kevin McBeth, Topeka, a junior in mathematics, economics
and statistics, ranked in the top 20 percent; Julia Galstad, Wichita,
a senior mathematics major, ranked in the top 16 percent. K-State's
Putnam team finished 30th and ranked in the top 7 percent of the
411 teams and 515 colleges in the Competition. K-State's Putnam
team finished 12th overall and first among all public universities
in 1996. In the last decade, K-State's Putnam team has finished
first in the Big 12 four times. The Putnam is the highest level
mathematical competition for undergraduates in the United States
and Canada. March 2005
*
Mark Smith, a K-State doctoral student in high-energy physics,
was selected to attend the 55th Lindau Meeting of Nobel Laureates
and Students June 26-July 1 in Lindau, Germany. Smith, Topeka,
was one of 60 outstanding graduate students in the United States
selected by the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation
and the Oak Ridge Associated Universities to attend. His sponsor
was the Department of Energy's Office of Science, which will cover
all costs of his attending the meeting. The structure of the meeting
is such that the Nobel Laureates present lectures on a topic of
their choice related to chemistry, physics and medicine during
morning sessions, and laureates and students mix in the less formal
small-group discussions during afternoon and evening sessions.
Smith is in his third year of high-energy physics graduate education.
The winners of the Nobel Prize have met each year since 1951 in
Lindau, and in recent years, the three U.S. agencies have sponsored
a group of top young U.S. scientists to join the laureates for
weeklong discussions of sciences and medicine. March 2005
*
Three K-State agriculture students won $1,500 scholarships from
the National Cattlemen's Foundation and the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange. Twenty students nationwide won the Beef Industry Scholarship,
sponsored by the two organizations. No other school had three
or more winners and only two institutions had more than one. K-State
recipients are: Audrey Young, senior in agricultural communications
and journalism, Erie; Kelsey Frasier, sophomore in agribusiness,
Limon, Colo.; and Emilie Miller, junior in animal sciences and
industry, Womelsdorf, Pa. To win the scholarships, students wrote
750-word essays describing an issue facing the beef industry and
the solution to this problem. Applicants also submitted resumes
and two letters of recommendation. The scholarship committee looked
for students who were active at their school, in their community
and in the beef industry. March 2005
*
AbdulRasak Toyin Yahaya, a K-State sophomore in civil engineering,
Kansas City, Mo., was elected chair of the Big XII Council on
Black Student Government at the Council's 28th annual conference,
Feb. 17-19, on the campus of the University of Colorado at Boulder.
In this position he will represent all the Black Student Unions
and Black Student Associations, not only in the Big 12, but throughout
the Midwest as well. Yahaya was also the recipient of the Mordean
Taylor-Archer Scholarship, awarded annually to the outstanding
member of the council. The award is named in honor of the council's
former adviser and a former associate provost for diversity and
dual career development at K-State. Yahaya previously served as
the council's parliamentarian for the 2004-2005 academic year.
In addition to his work on the Big XII Council, Yahaya is also
the president of the Kappa Tau chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity,
Inc., and serves as a member of K-State's Multicultural Ambassadors.
He is also a member of the National Society of Collegiate Scholars
and the National Society of Black Engineers. February 2005
*
The K-State Interfraternity and Panhellenic councils received
awards for excellence at the Mid-American Greek Council Association
Conference Feb. 17-20 in Chicago. The K-State Interfraternity
Council won the Jellison Award for division four, and the Panhellenic
Council won the Sutherland Award for division three. Both awards
are given to the councils that demonstrate overall excellence
in eight categories: academic achievement, council management,
leadership and educational development, membership recruitment,
philanthropy and community service, public relations, risk reduction
and management and self governance and judicial affairs.
The
Jellison Award is given to one interfraternity council in each
division, and the Sutherland Award is given to one Panhellenic
council in each division. The four divisions are based on the
size of the Greek community, with division one being the smallest
and division four being the largest. This is the eighth time since
1997 the K-State Interfraternity Council has won the Jellison
Award and the fifth time the Panhellenic Council has received
the Sutherland Award. February 2005
*
A K-State interior design student received first place in the
National Kitchen and Bath Association's 2004/2005 Student Design
Competition. Senior Audrey Koehn, Hillsboro, was chosen out of
127 applicants from across the country for her design of a kitchen
remodel. Her design consisted of a contemporary space emphasizing
the major bayside view. Koehn's entry, which took more than two
months to design, was a final project for her kitchen and bath
design course in spring 2004. Students were given the option to
submit their designs to the competition. January 2005
*
A design-build project completed by architecture students in K-State's
College of Architecture, Planning and Design provided the college
with new studios, a reception area, a new Pierce Commons and more
gallery space. The project, on the ground level of Seaton Hall's
east wing, was designed and started by students in fifth-year
architecture studios led by architecture faculty members Vladimir
Krstic and Chris Spaw during the 2003-2004 school year. Krstic
and Spaw had students in their 2004 fall semester fifth-year studios
complete the project. January 2005
*
A K-State interior design student received first place in the
National Kitchen and Bath Association's 2004/2005 Student Design
Competition. Senior Audrey Koehn, Hillsboro, was chosen out of
127 applicants from across the country for her design of a kitchen
remodel. Her design consisted of a contemporary space emphasizing
the major bayside view. Koehn's entry, which took more than two
months to design, was a final project for her kitchen and bath
design course in spring 2004. Students were given the option to
submit their designs to the competition. The award includes a
trip to the National Kitchen and Bath Association's Kitchen and
Bath Industry Show, May 9-12, in Las Vegas, where Koehn will receive
her award and cash prize. January 2005
*
Two K-State seniors in apparel and textiles won design awards
in the 2005 Fiber to Fashion Student Design Competition, sponsored
by the Alpaca Owners and Breeders Association. Kristin Brungardt,
Sublette, won first place and Morgan Gilliland, Houston, Texas,
received second place for designs that incorporated alpaca fiber
into fashions that were both marketable and fashionable. The students
created presentation boards to reflect the competition theme 'Alpaca
Transforming our lives,' and the design trend of taking
something basic and changing it into something new and complex.
They were chosen to submit their presentation boards by an internal
review of both students and faculty members. Nine entries from
K-State were chosen for the competition. There were a total of
38 entries from across the nation. January 2005
2004
student achievements
2003
student achievements
2002
student achievements
Achievements
index