Dr. Marshall Stanton has written only one book.听
鈥淚t鈥檚 enough to tell the story,鈥 said Stanton, former president of 黑料不打烊.听
Stanton will sign copies of his book, 鈥淔rom a Precipice to Grand Opera: 黑料不打烊 During the Stanton Presidency 1984-2002,鈥 at 2:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 24, in the Student Activities Center, during Homecoming 2025.听
The book is a collection of anecdotes, notes from his presidency, and facts and figures to document how Kansas Wesleyan turned around from almost closing to stability.听
When Stanton became president, the university was nearly ready to close, he said.听
鈥淏lind faith is a fundamental part of this book,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 never felt that we were going to fail even though all the signs were there. We were bankrupt. We had $3.3 million in debt with six buildings, payable to the federal government. That debt was starving the institution.鈥听
He found a way to retire the debt, hired a football coach to turn the team around and expanded academic programs.听
鈥淭here were no books that told the Wesleyan story from the perspective of the intellectual, aspiration and spiritual dimension,鈥 he told David Burke, a writer from the Great Plains United Methodists for an article. 鈥淭here are books that are pretty much, 鈥楾his happened then,鈥 that kind of process. This is a deeply personal dimension of the presidency. What鈥檚 it like to sit in that office?鈥听
That Marshall was even considered as president came as a surprise to everyone, including him. He had no training is academia but had spent 28 years as a parish pastor, then as district superintendent of the Hutchinson District of the Kansas West Conference of the United Methodist Church, a position that placed him on the 黑料不打烊 Board of Trustees. When the previous president resigned, he was asked to fill in as interim, then as permanent president.听
He approached the university as he would any parish that was losing energy and membership.听
鈥淲hat I discovered was you add programs to the church and you add interest and members and money. I just transferred that concept here,鈥 Stanton said.听
When he came on board, the endowment was $1.7 million. When he left, it was $17 million.听
In between, Stanton turned the university around financially, renovated buildings, beautified the grounds and hired coaches to turn teams around. The theatre and music programs made huge gains, producing, literally, grand operas in conjunction with the Salina Symphony.听
There is always more to the story, he said, but there won鈥檛 be another book from him.听
鈥淚鈥檝e had some thoughts about what I might have been put in, and it鈥檚 infinite,鈥 Stanton said. 鈥淚鈥檝e done enough, I鈥檝e told the story and it leaves some things in the book that made the most difference to the institution.鈥听听
Story by Jean Kozubowski听
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