Dr. Rick Muma stands in front of Morrison Hall

Wichita State University and all of Shocker Nation will celebrate the inauguration of our 15th president, Dr. Rick Muma, at 2:30 p.m. today in the Lowe Auditorium of the Hughes Metropolitan Complex.

Muma has been a member of Wichita State’s family for 25 years as a professor, department chair, and provost. The Kansas Board of Regents appointed him to the presidency on May 6.

President Muma's Town Hall for Fairmount College faculty and staff 3 p.m., Friday, Oct. 15 Meeting ID: 944 1646 4950 Passcode: 606906 Become More Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Wichita State University

Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences faculty and staff are invited to a town hall with President Rick Muma at 3 p.m. today, Oct. 15 via Zoom (Zoom Meeting ID: 944 1646 4950  Passcode: 606906). Interim Executive Vice President and Provost Shirley Lefever will also be a featured guest.

President Muma's Town Hall for Fairmount College students 9 a.m., Thursday, Oct. 14 Meeting ID: 925 4542 1214 Passcode: 322262 Become More Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Wichita State University

Undergraduate and graduate students majoring in liberal arts and sciences are invited to President Muma’s Town Hall with Fairmount College students at 9 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 14 via Zoom (Zoom Meeting ID: 925 4542 1214 Passcode: 322262). Interim Executive Vice President and Provost Shirley Lefever will also be a featured guest.

Enrollment for fall 2021 at Wichita State University and WSU Tech is showing strong growth despite a decline in 2020 caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the loss of thousands of local jobs.  

Returning to its pre-pandemic enrollment numbers, WSU enrolled 16,097 students this fall. That’s an increase of 3.5% over last year and the largest enrollment Wichita State has seen since 1990. Wichita State also has the largest first-time-in-college class in history at 1,735 students, an increase of 14.5%.   

Graphic featuring text 'You're invited to the inauguration of Richard D. Muma, Ph.D. as the fifteench president of Wichita State University.'

Wichita State invites the local campus and Wichita community to the inauguration ceremony for Dr. Richard Muma at 2:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 29, in the Hughes Metropolitan Complex, located at 29th Street N. and Oliver. A university reception will follow the event.

Members who wish to attend the in-person ceremony must RSVP no later than Friday, Oct. 15. The event will also be livestreamed on YouTube and on campus television monitors. The theme for the event is “Inspired by the past. Focused on the future.”

To save the date or for more information, call 316-978-3258 or email inauguration@wichita.edu. You can also visit the link below.

One of Wichita State’s most entertaining traditions, the annual Yard Show, was held Aug. 24. The annual event is hosted by the WSU Multicultural Greek Council.

Ahlberg Hall on the WSU campus is secure following a report of smoke from an electrical motor. There were no injuries, and damage was minor. 

Elevators are temporarily out of order. Classes normally held on floors 3, 4 and 5 will either be remote, relocated or canceled Thursday and Friday.

First gentleman Rick Case reads a book to two children as a volunteer for Wu Crew Reads.

Shocker Nation is taking the university’s mission of “being an educational driver” to heart through an outreach initiative aimed at the growing literacy rate among area elementary schoolchildren.  

Six members of WSU's Barton School of Business break ground on Promise Bridge

Supporters and leaders of Wichita State University gathered Tuesday, Aug. 31, to break ground on the Promise Bridge, a walkway that will link the Innovation Campus to the main campus and will be a marquee fixture just south of Wayne and Kay Woolsey Hall, new home to the W. Frank Barton School of Business.

Now under construction, Woolsey Hall is expected to open in mid-2022. The WSU Foundation and its campus/community partners raised private funds to pay for about half the cost of the new facility and for the entire cost of the Promise Bridge.

In his remarks during the groundbreaking, WSU President Rick Muma described the pedestrian bridge as a major campus landmark intended to be a gathering spot not only for students, but also for the entire community.

“Its location between the innovation and main campus will serve to strengthen our current partnerships and encourage future investment in Wichita State University and its students,” Muma said.

Barton School Dean Larisa Genin said the walkway’s three-pronged shape is not only a distinctive architectural feature, but also a representation of the university’s and business school’s commitment to academics, research and industry.

“The bridge is a physical manifestation of the promise we make to our students, faculty, staff, alumni and partners,” Genin said in describing why the structure was named the Promise Bridge.

The Promise Bridge will span a large water feature south of Woolsey Hall. It will feature a seating bench along the length of the bridge, with wi-fi provided so that students and visitors can gather and work there. Light fixtures will illuminate the bridge and water at night, and two small lighted fountains will be located at each end of the bridge.

Pictured Anthony Gallardo and Troy Moellinger.

Anthony Gallardo and Troy Moellinger have been named the 2021-22 recipients of the Layman L. Clark / Kansas CCIM Chapter Scholarship in Real Estate. 

Gallardo is a senior working on a field major in economics and real estate at Wichita State University. While completing his degree, he has worked for several real estate companies in the Wichita area, most recently with Augusta Partners. Moellinger is a senior majoring in finance with an emphasis in real estate at Wichita State. He currently works as an asset manager with Clark Investment Group.