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The Wichita State Shockers football program was a college football team that represented Wichita State University until the school discontinued football. The team had 32 head coaches since its first recorded football game in 1897.
Richard D. Muma is an American academic, physician assistant and president of Wichita State University. He was named Wichita State University president by the Kansas Board of Regents in May 2021 after serving in an interim role following the departure of Jay Golden in September 2020. [1] [2] Muma is the first physician assistant to be named ...
The Shockers competed as an independent program and played their home games at Cessna Stadium. It was the Shockers 90th and final season. It was the Shockers 90th and final season. The team, coached by Ron Chismar , went 3–8 and announced on December 2 that the team's 1986 season would be its last.
William M. Jardine, 1934–1949, previously was Professor/Dean (1910-1918) and President (1918-1925) of Kansas State University, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1925-1929), and U.S. Minister to Egypt (1930-1933) Harry F. Corbin, 1949–1963, previously was Associate Professor of Political Science at WU; Wichita State University (WSU)
One day before the start of the 2022-23 season, the Wichita State men’s basketball team played host to a five-star recruit and five other Texas high school prospects at Koch Arena for the day on ...
Chartered before Kansas became a state. Was originally named Episcopal Female Seminary of Topeka but changed name around the time the school re-chartered in 1870. [14] Concordia Normal School: Concordia: 1874: 1876: Lost state funding and did not survive. State normal schools were consolidated to what is now Emporia State University [15]
According to a 1974 Wichita Beacon story about the dedication, Winnebago tribe member Etta Hunter “prayed that ‘for as many years as this work of art may stand’ it would make for greater ...
At the time, the restaurant was connected to a motor lodge and sat on the western edge of the Wichita city limits. Larry Conover ran Town & Country after his father died in 1980. Larry died in 2000.