Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)

 - Class of 1999

Page 27 of 499

 

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1999 Edition, Page 27 of 499
Page 27 of 499



Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1999 Edition, Page 26
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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1999 Edition, Page 28
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Page 27 text:

Marty Slagle, junior in food science and industry, looks in shock at her husband, Nathan, after discovering the person in front of them purchased the last student season ticket. More than 8,000 tickets were available, and students could purchase up to four sets of tickets at a time, allowing for quicker sales. (Photo by Clif Palmberg) Steve Stewman, junior in psychology, smiles at his luck when he hears he will receive the last football ticket. Stewman waited in line for more than six hours Saturday. I got here at 6:30 a.m. Someone told me the wrong line, so I went through the senior line. Then, I had to go back to the junior section and go through the line again, he said. I came with my girlfriend, who is a senior, and she got her tickets and left with the car and my keys. Stewman received tickets, but he was unable to buy another set for his roommate. (Photo by Clif Palmberg) 23 ticket sales

Page 26 text:

PIGSKIN PANIC CONTINUED FROM PAGE 20 Athletic department officials applauded the adoption of identification scanners, which prevented ticket sales staff from writing thousands of social security numbers and quickened the ticket-buying process. Scanners allowed 700 purchases an hour. Although additional scanners would be used during the 1999 ticket sales to increase productivity, a rule permitting students to purchase tickets for up to three other students of the same class level with proper student identification cards was debated. While many students took advantage of the policy allowing them to purchase tickets for friends, some saw it as an opportunity to make a profit and sold extra season tickets at prices ranging from $150 to $500 a sheet. I don ' t think scalping entered any of our minds, Carol Adolph, intercollegiate athletic agency manager, said. We looked at the pros and cons during meetings, and that issue never came up. We learned very quickly and were very disappointed. Just like tickets, the supply of $30 ICAT passes diminished quickly. During combo ticket sales Aug. 28, more than 2,500 passes were sold, prompting the ICAT board to increase the number of passes available. Even after increasing the original supply by 300, the ICAT board was left with about 200 of the total 2,800 passes on Saturday morning. ICAT Olympics Sports Director Toni Parks, junior in mass communications, said the demand for ICAT passes surpassed expectations. We were expecting to sell about 600 the first day and have a good 1,400 left the next day, Parks said. It was amazing. We never expected it. It totally broadsided us. Since K-State football headed into the season as a top-ranked team, Adolph said she knew ticket demand would far exceed its supply. While K-State dealt with growing pains of athletic success, molding a fool-proof ticket system would consume athletic department officials ' time for the rest of the season. Parents called angry that their children didn ' t get tickets, Adolph said. I asked them if they could think of a better system. They didn ' t have an answer. For right now, neither do I. Ticket Frenzy Fast facts about ticket sales Total tickets sold 8,828 students purchased tickets Combo tickets 4,700 of all tickets were sold as combos ICAT Sold out after 2,800 students bought passes Combo ticket sales $160 per ticket for a gross of $752,000 Football ticket only sales $98 per ticket for a gross of $404,544 Total revenue $1,156,544 from sales of student tickets 22 student life Juniors wait outside the corrals in line for season football tickets Aug. 29 in the Bramlage Coliseum parking lot. Corrals were set up to keep students of the same grade classification together and to reduce line jumping. Students with a senior or above classification received priority on the second day of the sales. Juniors were still in line when the last ticket was sold, leaving underclassmen who had not purchased combo tickets, ticketless. The ticket sales process went faster because the sales staff did not have to write out thousands of social security numbers. The athletic purchased new scanners to help keep lines moving. The scanners allowed 700 purchases an hour. (Photo by Clif Palmberg)



Page 28 text:

Nick ' s Legend Story of East Stadium ' s ghost According to legend, Nick played football in the 1950s. While playing in a game, he broke his neck and was taken to the area now known as the Purple Masque Theatre. Nick ' s parents were called to take him to the hospital, but they were involved in a fatal car wreck on the way to the stadium. Nick died in the theater while waiting for his parents. According to the legend, the ghost of Nick still waited for his parent to arrive. Although Pat Patton, research specialist for the University Archives, discovered that Nick never existed. the legend lived on. Jo Miller, speech theater and dance instructor; Tyler Lansdown, junior in theater; and Jacob Brown, junior in mechanical engineering, perform the play Fantasy. Lansdown, who wrote the play Superman Theory, said he was surprised by the turnout for the event. I didn ' t think so many people would be here, he said. This is kind of crazy. I ' m nervous. I just wrote this a few days ago. (Photo by Clif Palmberg) Charlotte MacFarland, professor of speech communication, theater and dance, holds a candle and tells the legend of Nick, the ghost, before the tour of Purple Masque Theatre. MacFarland got the idea for Midnight Madness from New York University and hoped it would increase awareness about the theater department. (Photo by Clif Palmberg) 24 student life

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