
Photo gallery: K-State celebrates Homecoming 2019
There’s no place like Manhattan, Kansas.
We celebrated all the things that make this college town special during K-State’s
2019 Homecoming, Oct. 20-26. This year’s theme was “Manhappiest Place on Earth” and
drew in students, alumni and friends for a week of favorite Homecoming traditions,
such as the parade and pep rally. The week ended with a Wildcat victory against No.
5 ranked Oklahoma, 48-41.
View some of the highlights from Homecoming 2019 in our photo gallery below, and find
even more photos on our Facebook page.

It was a beautiful day for the 2019 Homecoming Philanthropy 5K Run/Walk! The event raised funds for the Boys and Girls Club of Manhattan.
View a list of the race results.Photo: David Mayes ’96, K-State Alumni Association

Student organizations competed and showed off their best Wildcat cheers at Pant the Chant at Bramlage Coliseum.
Photo: David Mayes ’96, K-State Alumni Association

Students added some colorful touches to Aggieville by decorating windows during the annual Paint the ’Ville.
Photo: David Mayes ’96, K-State Alumni Association

Bramlage Coliseum was the place to be during Wildcat Request Live, where Greek chapters demonstrated their best dancing and lip-syncing skills.
Photo: David Mayes ’96, K-State Alumni Association

There were no tricks and lots of treats at the Homecoming Children’s Carnival in the K-State Student Union.
Photo: Ashley Pauls, K-State Alumni Association

Super Bowl XLV champion Jordy Nelson ’07 gives a fan a high five during the Homecoming Parade. He served as the Homecoming 2019 grand marshal and rode with his family in the parade.
Photo: Maria Childs ’14, K-State Alumni Association

Lots of purple pride was on display at the 2019 Homecoming Parade.
Photo: Ashley Pauls, K-State Alumni Association

Students dance to the music playing at the Homecoming Pep Rally after the parade.
Photo: Ashley Pauls, K-State Alumni Association

Congratulations to the new 2020 K-State student ambassadors, Sam Bond and Chaz Corredor! Read more about the new ambassadors in the upcoming December issue of At K-State.
Photo: Ashley Pauls, K-State Alumni Association

During Homecoming week, K-State also recognized the 2019 Family of the Year: the Jane Dodge Works family. Learn more about the family and their K-State heritage.

K-State has recruited several new experts to lead the university’s strategic enrollment
and student retention efforts.
In recognition of Fitzwater’s distinguished career, the K-State Alumni Association
presented him with the 2019 Alumni Excellence Award on Oct. 17.
Fitzwater was awarded an honorary doctorate by K-State in 2015. He served as the fall
2015 Graduate School
















Chipman played basketball at Mott Junior College before lettering twice at K-State
playing for previous Kansas Sports Hall of Fame inductee Jack Hartman. Chipman helped
lead the Wildcats to two Elite Eight appearances in 1972 and 1973. He served as assistant
coach at Washburn University for three seasons before becoming head coach in 1979.
He led the Ichabods for 38 years with a career of 808-352. He is one of only 25 coaches
in college basketball history with over 800 wins. Among Chipman’s top accomplishments
are his 1986-87 NAIA national championship and his 2000-01 NCAA national finalist
finish.
Cost was a first-team All-American volleyball selection at K-State and was named Big
12 Player of the Year in 2003; she is the only player in school history to achieve
either milestone. She remains in the top 10 in school history in career kills with
1,212, a career hitting percentage at .354, and career block assists with 380. She
led the 2003 K-State team to the Big 12 Conference title and a Sweet 16 berth in the
NCAA Tournament.
Beth Krissek ’84 originally planned to donate a kidney to her friend, Cammy Houston.
However, Krissek ended up donating to a total stranger, and her act of kindness played
a role in Kansas City’s longest kidney transplant chain, which ultimately involved
a number of K-Staters.
A random act of kindness in the K-State Campus Store from an anonymous stranger is
inspiring K-Staters, once again proving that Wildcats are one big purple family.
An 89-year-old K-State alum, Ann Berry ’51, wanted to attend the K-State Alumni Association’s
recent event near Minneapolis, Minnesota, but she needed a ride to get there.
Even while they’re still students, K-Staters are already paying it forward.
While they were students at Kansas State University, Bailey Elliott ’15 and Emily
Ewert ’16 had a lot in common. They had similar majors, attended some of the same
classes, and joined the same sorority — Alpha Delta Pi — where they shared fun memories
such as spontaneous food runs or goofy, late-night study breaks.
Kim Giles of Waco, Texas, shared this message with K-State staff after being impressed
by the university’s Wildcat hospitality during the recent Baylor football game.
Traveling abroad is a dream for many students at K-State, but for a small group of
people, traveling abroad also means serving a new community to build a better world.








The Combat Robotics Squad took first place in the 2019 regional competition, BOTSKC,
in Liberty, Missouri, and then went on to take fourth at the national competition
in California, Pennsylvania.





