by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector
March 6, 2023
MANHATTAN ā The food scientist in Richard Linton leans back in a purple-and-white chair in Call Hall to recite contents of his favorite ice cream.
It is cherry brick road ā at least until a new favorite creation emerges from the dairy science lab at Kansas State University. The current preference was crafted while he was agriculture dean at North Carolina State University. The four key ingredients: chocolate ice cream, marshmallows, chocolate chunks and Michigan cherries.
āThe two chocolates were my wifeās and daughterās. My son was the marshmallow. I was cherries,ā said Linton, who just completed his rookie year as Kansas State president. āWe used to say, āFollow the cherry brick road.ā It was the No. 2 seller at N.C. State.ā
The university educator and economic visionary in Linton appreciated the campus dairy bar, which also sells flour, meat and dairy goods produced nearby, was situated in the middle of a planned $125 million infrastructure construction and renovation project aimed at elevating reach of the College of Agriculture.
Linton said the blend of state and private funding would highlight Kansas Stateās new interdisciplinary approach to attracting students, building a workforce, supporting the economy, expanding next-generation research and working closer with private industry. Kansas State raised more than $82 million in private donations to qualify for the maximum 3:1 match from the state of $25 million.
A supplemental $25 million appropriation from state lawmakers brought to $125 million the total available for development of a new Global Center for Food and Grain Innovation, Agronomy Research Center, Agronomy Innovation Center and Livestock Competition Arena. The project, part demolition and part construction, was expected to start this summer and be wrapped up in late 2026.
āItās just amazing how the industry stepped up to be able to support this effort,ā Linton said on the Kansas Reflector podcast. āItās all about bringing different disciplines togetherĀ to be able to solve the grand global challenges of agriculture. Letās take water as an example. You need to have agronomists. You need to have soil scientists. You need to have geologists. You might need to have plant scientists. All of these different disciplines canāt solve the challenges alone.ā
The land-grant heritage
Linton is intent on bringing new focus to Kansas Stateās status as the nationās first operational land-grant university ā a distinction held since 1863. The core function of a land-grant university has been to use research-based information to improve the quality of life for all Kansans, he said. Thatās often recognized by Kansas Stateās operation of the agricultural extension service.
āItās the university for the people, for the people of the state,ā the president said. āWhat makes us different from any other university here in Kansas, is that weāre present every single day improving livesĀ and changing communities in all 105 counties.ā
Kansas Stateās goal for promoting prosperity in Kansas includes creation of 3,000 jobs and addition of $3 billion to the stateās economy.
Linton was named the 15th president of Kansas State in December 2021, and displayed his new purple socks during the initial news conference. He was agriculture dean at N.C. State from 2012 to 2022, food science department chairman at Ohio State university from 2011 to 2012 and a food science professor at Purdue University from 1994 to 2011. He holds a bachelorās degree in biology, a masterās degree in food science and a doctorate in food science from Virginia Tech University.
He began his presidential duties in Manhattan in February 2022, and has made his presence felt by visiting dozens of counties during the past year.
āItās about celebrating the partnerships that we already have in place,ā Linton said. āItās about thinking about new partnerships that could be created. And, itās also about selling the amazing student experience that we have at Kansas StateĀ to prospective parentsĀ and students that may want to go into higher education. Ninety-five percent of success in higher educationĀ is building relationships and establishing trust.ā
Thinking differently
Linton said it was no secret Kansas Stateās enrollment slid from more than 24,000 in 2014 to less than 20,000 last fall, and stabilizing and expanding student enrollment remained one of his top administrative priorities.
āDeclining enrollment is a big issue and challenge for all land-grants. And, at Kansas State, itās been our biggest challenge over the last eight years,ā he said. āWeĀ have to adapt and think differently about changing demographics. And we need to have a balance of in-state studentsĀ and out-of-state students in order to be able to fulfill the operational needs of the university.ā
He said the expanding Hispanic population in southwest Kansas meant Kansas State had to consider how to serve more first-generation college students. For example, he said, some of those college-age people may not want to move to Manhattan as a freshman. They may prefer attending a community college or enrolling in online courses through Kansas State before finishing a degree in Manhattan, he said.
He said Kansas State had to consider whether students preferred a 12-month academic schedule rather than the typical nine-month course schedule requiring four or five years to complete a degree.
āWhat about the 45-year-old that works for Cargill that would like to elevate their career in data analytics?ā he said. āHow can we spur research innovation that attracts industry to want to come so that we have more jobs in the state and keep more students in the state relative to extensionĀ and engagement?ā
Heās also an advocate of experiential learning whether that involved milking dairy cows, processing cheese, engaging in horticulture or any of hundreds of other avenues for personal enrichment.
āIf I had my way, and Iām moving in that direction, I would have every single student have some kind ofĀ hands-on learning experience, whether itās an internship, whether itās an international experience, or whether itās an undergraduate research program. That hands-on experience helpsĀ enable them to understand what they actually want to be in life. It also gives them a great jump up in the job market.ā
Kansas Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kansas Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sherman Smith for questions: info@kansasreflector.com. Follow Kansas Reflector on Facebook and Twitter.

