Source:
Jon Wefald, 785-532-6221
Photo and bio at: http://www.mediarelations.k-state.edu/WEB/News/MediaGuide/wefaldbio.html
News release prepared by: Cheryl May, 785-532-6415
Wednesday,
September 18, 2002
WEFALD
TABBED FOR SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN HALL OF FAME
MANHATTAN
-- Prestigious company: Knute Rockne, Charles A. Lindbergh, Jon Wefald.
Kansas
State University president Jon Wefald has been selected to be inducted
into the Scandinavian-American Hall of Fame in Minot, N.D., Oct. 9.
The
K-State President will be inducted along with the late jazz great Peggy
Lee, the North Dakota-born singer who became one of America's top female
singers in recent history, and Alf Engen, who is a 16-time United States
ski champion.
Others
who have been inducted into the Scandinavian-American Hall of Fame in
recent years besides Rockne and Lindbergh are Dr. Norman Borlaug, former
Vice President Walter Mondale, Bud Grant and Eric Sevareid. Five governors
are included in the Hall of Fame, along with political leaders, outstanding
athletes and entertainers like Celeste Holme, Arlene Dahl and Victor
Borge.
"I
am very pleased and honored to be selected into the Scandinavian-American
Hall of Fame," Wefald said. "As a graduate of Minot High School,
I will be looking forward to going back to my hometown. I am especially
pleased that a friend of mine from Minot, Dale Brown, the former head
basketball coach at LSU, will be my presenter at the Oct. 9 banquet
for the new inductees."
Under
Wefald's leadership as president of Kansas State University since 1986,
the university has added 1.8 million square feet of new university buildings,
including a new library, a new art museum, and a nationally acclaimed
plant science building. In addition, enrollments increased from nearly
17,000 to more than 22,000; and K-State has built a healthy endowment
program and established a national presence in athletics.
Since
1986, K-State's total research funding has increased to record numbers,
resulting in the university returning nearly $17 for every $1 of state
funding it receives, to boost the state's economy.
K-State
leads the nation's public universities in the total number of Rhodes,
Marshall, Truman, Goldwater and Udall scholarship winners since 1986.
K-State students have won more Truman scholarships, more Goldwater scholarships
and more Phi Kappa Phi Fellowships than any other public university
in the nation. By recognizing and encouraging excellence, Wefald has
helped K-State achieve success in speech and debate competition and
on the athletic field.
Before
coming to K-State, Wefald served as chancellor of the State University
System in Minnesota from 1982-86, a system comprised of seven universities.
He was president of Southwest State in Marshall, Minn., from 1977-82;
Minnesota's Commissioner of Agriculture from 1971-77, and a member of
the faculty at Gustavus Adolphus from 1965-70.
He
earned his B.A. from Pacific Lutheran in 1959, his M.A. in history and
political science from Washington State University in 1961, and his
doctorate in history from the University of Michigan in 1965.
Kansas State University
is a comprehensive, research, land-grant institution first serving students
and the people of Kansas, and also the nation and the world.