SU Announces Two Wilson Scholars iGA Sends Stephans, Watts Receive beerleaders Assistance, Recognition Woodrow Wilson Fellowships were presented to two WSU 0 Portland senior men recently by Dr. Emory Lindquist, president of the University. , student Government As- Both English majors, Gary honorable mention to 1,242 stu iciation's allocation of $780 Stephens and Robert A. Watts, dents, the majority of which are send five cheerleaders to will receive tuition and fixed fe&s expected to receive ‘alternate le NCAA Tour- at the graduate school of their awards from other sources. imenl, in Portland, Ore., choice, in addition to $1,800 for fas reported in a regular living expenses, as do all recipi­ The progi-am is the largest pri­ vate source of support for advanced leeting Tuesday night. ents of the Woodrow Wilson Fel­ lowships. work in the liberal arts. It has Sharon Bailey, SGA executive The two WSU students are been financed, since expansion in kcrotarj', explained that the ad- among the more than 11,000 fac­ 1058 to its ])vesent size, by two jtional allocation o f $1,000 made ulty-nominated college seniors in Ford Foundation grants toLiling Je trip possible. ihc United States and Canada who ?52 million. competed for grants. For the aca­ Colleges rei)i-esonted with Fel­ "Our budget was figured on demic year 1965-66 there were ap­ lowships winners this year number st spring’s budget of student proximately 1,400 chosen. 361, twenty-three of which are loney, but the increased enroll- The Foundation also accorded represented for the first time. Unt produced additional funds,” STIPEND WINNERS— Gary Stephens and Robert Walls, liss Bailey concluded. recipients of Woodrow Wilson Scholarships, view' a Harvard Catalogue. Faculty evaluation committee re- Lrted that a letter has been rafted concerning student-faculty laluation and that the instructors Sayre Urges American Youth The lill receive it soon.

SGA president Dave Crockett To Engage In Tdea’ Battle aised Tim Cornett, CCUN chair- fan, for organizing the delegation Moral rearmament was the issue at hand yesterday as Lx-olymipic Gold Medalist John Sayre addressed WSU stu­ tid said “it was comparable to Sunflower Iher delegations from larger uni- dents in Wilner Auditorium in an 11 o’clock speech. ______OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER ksitios.” Sayre, a man strongly oriented on the sports field. in the field of athletics, nevei the Vol. LXIX— No. 40 Wichita State University, Wichita, Ka. Mar. 19, 1965 SGA elections will be H:o0 a.m. The athlete urges the hundred less feels that the youth of Aimni- million youth of Amea-ica to seek 1 p.m. April 6 and 7. ca must fight in the conipetition the co'-reet direct'or and purpo.so of ideas even more vigorously than Sports Preview . . . Thirty-hvo cheerleading applicu- to euro what is wrong in today's lons have been turned in for the world. pyouts which will be held April “ If we take on the responsibility according to pop coordinator, Ballast Meeting for the life of our nation we will 1st Shocker N CAA Crown »hn Morton. restore to America not only her The Ballast Political Party will athletic greatness, but her great­ Hippodrome committee is trying hold a meeting in the Sigma Phi ness as a nation meant to set a b obtain faculty and outside judges Epsilon fraternity house, 1740 N. pattern of sportsmanship and na­ A t Stake In Portland br the activities which begin 8 Vassal-, at 4 p.m. Sunday. tionhood the rest of the world Wichita State University’s Shockers make their first attempt at |m. April 23. .All interested students are in­ will follow,” Sayre believes. an NCAA national championship tonight os they test their skills against Sayre was director of athletics I Improvement of the installation vited to attend the meeting, ac­ a reigning champion and previously number two ranked UCLA. at Moi-al Rearmament’s Confer­ fremony was discussed in old cording to Jeff Bi-ooks, party The Shockers won this chance by defeating the Oklahoma State ence for Tomorrow’s America last usiness and plans fo r the forth- president. year. University Cowboys 54-46 last Saturday night in the Midwest regional bming installation were also cov- at Manhattan. V cd . Wichita will put a 21-6 record against the Bruin’s 26-2 mark. UCLA will be led by all-American and honorable men­ tion Keith Erickson. They are sporting 24.1 and 13.6 points a game onight’s Flick News In Brief lespectively. By CLIFF TARPY, Staff Writer Wichita and UCLA both use the full court press defense although Ihft Bruins use a zone on the full court and then drop hack into a 0 Be Laughs THE FBI has begun an investigation into the violence that has man-to-man, while Wichita will switch from one to the other. Light, romantic comedy ixploded in Alabama’s capitol city of Montgomery. Tuesday, mounted Wichita Coach Gary Thompson feels, “We’re not overconfident. ili be on tap tonight at 7 possemen clubbed and dispersed Negro and white demonstrators re­ That sure isn’t our problem.” of the Bruins says, “We id 9 p.m. in DFAC as “ Ask sulting in injuries sending eight to the hospital. lespect all of the clubs in the tournament. Any one could win it.” fny Girl” is shown as this Shortly after the melee, a thousand Negroes marched on the Ala­ Wichitii will place its hopes on all five starters with, Kelly Pete reek’s Two-Bit'Flick. bama capitol. They were unsuccessful in their attempts to hand a peti­ liaiulling the playmaker chores, Pete will go gamewar j ' with a 17 tion to Gov. George C. Wallace. points-a-gtime average. I Gig Young plays a young N«w IN WASHINGTON, Imth houses of Congress con­ During the recent Midwest i-egional three Wichita players were fork cigarette executive who is tain oi)timism that President Johnson’s bill on voting ursuod by Shirley MacLaine, his chosen to the all-star team. These were Vernon Smith, Dave Leach, rights would be appi-oved with a speed unusual for a “cretai7. and Pete who was also voted most valuable player. legislation o f such importance. The game ^vill bo televised at 11 p.m. over KTVH Channel 12. David Niven, his brother, helps Commenting on Franco’s plans to extend econo­ "irley trap him because he would mic credit to North Viet Nam, Under Secrotai^ of Gig to settle down. SUite George Ball said at a foreign policy conference that,j^it is n^t#‘'enough fo.v a .nhtion simply./to offer Sliirley^ gets her man wny complications arise, but love Cliff Tarpy advice on al! aspects o f world affairs.” ins out. IN HEIIIUT, Lebanon, tliousands of Arab youths are rioting in ])iotest to West German intentions to establish diplomatic relations with Israel. A crowd of demonstrators estimated at 10,000 strong set fire to the West German Embassy in Baghdad, capitol o f Iraq. KMUW A bill to limit a state’s power to shape legislative districts received overwhelming approval in the House, Tuesday. This bill against gerry­ Program Notes mandering now goes to the Senate whore it faces more uncertain ■J'onight at 8 p.m. KMUW will prospects. * , rr,i . '* ''ondcast the Shocker’s victory Some sources say that UN Secretary-General U Thant is arguing Oklahoma for the NCAA Mid- privately that the U.S. is on the wrong track in Viet Nam, that the I^^^Jfional Championship. Both U.S. can’t wage a successful jungle war in Viet Nam. inockor games in the Regionals IN CALIFORNIA, a new right wing assault has been launched ere covered by KMUW sports- against Democratic Governor Pat Brown. A group, called the Consti­ , Tim Hurley and Larry tutional Defense Committee is collecting signatures on a petition de­ roffh,t, . manding a recall election. This, they hope, would result in the ousting ^^Sarnmy Davis and Billy Daniels the musical version of ^‘Xn-^making of the President, 1964,” published last week by Dean den Boy” on “Broadway Show- Burch, is a 38-page booklet which places the fall GOP political disaster 7 p.m. Sunday. mi almost everyone but Barry Goldwater. World s Greatest Music,” 8 p.m. The GOP defeat was not a product o f 1964, Burch explains, but len present an all-Beetho- It of a thirty year decline in Republican registration which put REVEREND’S HONOR— Students and faculty honored a *1 including Symphonies the^party at a 53-25 per cent disadvantage to the Democrats by the civil rights falaKty Wednesday in the WSU Chapel. • 1 and 9 and the Emperor (Story,_ comment page 2.) ''neerto. election year.

Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives M

lA to Oi Why We Had A Rally Good Luck Shockers O) From HEADS JS Uiu For Rev. James Reeb ed Am erica's By JAMES RUOFF, Faculty advisor, WSU NAACP James Reeb Memorial Rally on Wednesday a number of students asked, dress-casual favorite... Whats the purpose of such a demonstration? What good can it do?” Like most genuine questions, this one is not easily answered. the No doubt there will be cynics such a rally would be an anodyne our old ways; it will have amount­ 03 who will read all kinds of tough- for a haunting despair, an anxious ed to just so much palaver if we go WINTHROP O minded motives into such a dem­ conscience. onstration (an effort to spur the back to lethargy and indifference. WILLOW local congressman, a tactical en­ But of coui-se no such panacea And I address this in particular circlement of public sympathy, over works. If it was an act of to our own NAACP members who etc.) while othei*s still more cynical purification it was like Holy Com­ mode the Rev. .Reeb service pos­ hand sewn front. will insist that it was ‘ motivated munion, that purification which is sible: we do not need militancy by soft^minded hysteria or ex­ also, paradoxically, an acknowledge­ so much as faith and energy in hibitionism. ment of ti-ansgression. Earlier this oui struggle (After all, our ad­ week the President said it very versaries have plenty of militancy). Yet I doubt if our NAACP niem- well: “...let each of us look with­ But we must dedicate ourselves to l>ers, their speakers, or the stu­ in our own hearts and our own the prospect of work—long, tedi­ dents who attended were in any communities.” ous, exhaustin.g and often frustrat­ way prompted by Machiavellian ing work. pragmatism or theatrical ambi­ After the service a friend of tions. I suspect that, instead, most mine said, “You know, it’s really There will never be a bettor time of them acted on a profound im­ difficult not to get emotionally for it. So I'll see you next Wednes­ pulse to assert themselves by their involved!” Well, I say bless him. day night at the NAACP meeting. visible, symbolic presence against Surely he doesn’t call to mind St. Will you join us? the whole vast cloud of evil that Thomas Aquinas’s Seven Argu­ has engulfed us. ments for the existence of God ML ML ML ML ML ML ML everytime he says, “Forgive me, a Perhaps they felt that Rev. James s MANNING’S r Reeb (“bom in Wichita, murdered Father, for I have sinned.” The heart has its own litany, its own a in Selma,” ns the NAACP flyers s grimly proclaimed) was a power­ irreducible logic and mathematics. LUNCH ful emotive symbol of the tragic Results ^ Half Block South Of WSU g price of our national sins in a ^ On Fnirninant demonic mathematics of hatred. But in a sense the service for IK IW IW IK IW IW IW Man’s Image Rev. Reeb will not, in fact, have James Reeb became for them “done any good” if we return to tile personified equivalent of a bleak century of persecution, terror and degradation. Perhaps many of Reeb^s Death us who live secure from poverty, NO. 1.30 SLIP-ON • BLACK CALF • B. GOLD CAK humiliation and violence hoped that Gives Issue For Protest : y , v ) T ■. 14.95 - ,i OUR STOCK INCLUDES 38 STYLES A rally in memory of Rev. James ...... Kell Keeb was hold last Wednesday in iZ the Grace Chapel. The rally, also Hawkins, a I'ofnirr PRICED 10.95 TO 19.95 protesting the denial of human W.T'. sliulcnt, AIANY STYLES — AA TO E WIDTHS rights in Alabama and Mississippi, \m(l(*rstan(l.s the problems r" featured prayers and speeches by B'/z TO 14 SIZES (Extra Charge for 13 and 14) student l^ders such as WSU NA­ a eolleKe student ACP president Sylvester Jones, races in i)urchasin«i LINCOLN HEIGHTS Unitarian minister Paul Osborne, auto insurance. DOWNTOWN i::* Can you and Wichita attorney Chester VILLAGE STORE Lewis. In the past he lias Douglas at Oliver affnrd your present IH IE A D S 111 East Dougin proved so lleljiful to bis auto insurance Said Rev. Osborne, “This was where Jim Reeb was born. Granted, clients that ho lias ra tes ? no one knew it until he was killed, reeeiitly expanded. but who would not'want to claim GBD and other fine pipes (Villege students often a native son wlio cared enough Tf you feel that you Pure tobacco blends to make the America of which he find that liability was proud, a nation for all of its cannot afford your Pipe racks insurance alone, people, after all this was an All- liresent insurance rates, Tobacco pouches & jars America City. We love Negroes, call Kell liaAvkins at consumes almost one particularly when they can contri­ Accessories ^ ir 2-ir)!7. fourth of their yearly bute to a winning basketball team, Pipe repair even though we may not want iiieome. them as our next door neighbors.” He eaii jirohahly Appropriate to these comments help you. Here’s what you can a;:e the words of Mahatma Gandhi, . “The power of suggestion is such, «lo to get good, - that a man at last becomes what PIPE SHOP reliable automobile he believes himself to be. If we R. Kell Hawkins continued to believe ourselves and 127 E. Fir.st • AM 2-7702 insuranee at reasonable let others believe that we are weak INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. and helpless and therefore offer 2522 E. Douglas Pipe Makers & Tobacconists passive resistance, our resistance MU 2-1517 would never make us strong, and 10 \M ,o 1 V m dnlly!^ ^ at the earliest opportunity we R. Kell Hawkins ^vould give up passive resistance as a weapon of the weak. t- INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. But as Jones said, echoing James 2522 E. Douglas Baldwin’s warning that atrocities MU 2-1517 like the death of Rev. Reeb will not be tolerated, “No more water, fire next time.” 3932 East Thirteenth Dr.iins rtinnin/; slow? Scv,i r donm d: 20% DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS • ONE DAY SERVICE • MENDING FREE fiii (on minor repair jobs) 4 - '■ • YOUR INTEREST AT HEART

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Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives . -c-V V-. i» '/W .. I''.'..rK

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Janet Parrish «0 Katie Renfro Ruth Ann Olive Connie Hart Jane Gates Delta Delta Delta Delta Gamma Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Phi Gamma Phi Beta 965 May Queen To Be Selected Today F E A T U R E S [ Waym.at /^Queen ii» v r v r \ 11965, who \ will ir i1 1 she T*l _ • t ^ Janet Parrish, Delta Delta Delta; shij) cup for men’s and women’s the coronation along with theii' >? The election of the 1965 May Kathie Renfi'o, Delta Gamma; and division of highest academic ac­ escorts. A flower girl and a crown- NORELCO Jueen is being held today in area Jane Gates, Gamma Phi Beta. complishments, and several others. bearer also are selected by the of the CAC according to Keith CONTINENTAL queen. Thompson, election commissioner. Coronation of the queen will be Both first and second runners-up 01 CORDLESS TAPE RECORDER 7 p.m. April 23, following the pre­ will attend the queen as princesses. Five organizations are sponsor- liminary rounds of HipjKKlixtme. As May Queen, the girl also g candidates. Ruth Ann Olive is Other activities that night will be chooses a maid o f honor and an­ j sponsored by Alpha Chi the tapping of Mortar Board, other attondent. HOWARD mega; Connie Hart, Alpha Phi; awarding of pep trophies, scholar- All candidates are presented at SUMMER SESSION TOURS i ' THE ORIGINAL SUMMER 'he Sheer Joy O f Painting STUUY TOUR IN THE PACIFIC

43 DAYS iotivates Graduate Student ORIENT $1989 SIX UNIVERSITY CREDITS By AL KLEIN, Staff Reporter Hawaii, Japan, Taiwan, Philippines, Hong Kong, Thailand and Singapore- fabled names you've dreamed about- “I paint for the sheer joy of painting. In order not to all in a single escorted program for sophisticated travelers whose intellect, Don’t let the sm all size fool you I ippear nihilistic I should add that there are to be no con­ adverturous spirit, and previous travel This tape recorder Is big quality to other more accessible areas make notations of therapy as purpose.” them ready for one of the most excit­ through and through. Weighs ing and pleasurable of all travel ex­ only / lbs. Works on ordinary This statement only has mean- Wilson has entered ninny exhibi­ periences on earth. Offers the most flashlight batteries. Push two extensive schedule of special dinners, buttons you’re recording. Push png for the artistically inclined. tions and won distinguishing cosmopolitan entertainment, evening one button you're playing back. events, social functions and widest Also record direct from radio, sightseeing coverage. Its author, Mr. Donald Roller W il­ awards. Among the exhibits are TV or phono; playback through son, graduate instructor in the the 5th Annual Exhibition of South­ radio or hi-fi. School of Fine Arts, is indeed in west America Ai-t, 1963; 34th An­ CIRCLE WORLD his own right an artist. nual Exhibition, Springfield Re­ 65 DAYS, for only $2799 NINE UNIVERSITY CREDITS gional, 1964; and the 14th Mid- /\/ore/ci Mr. Wilson attended Emporia Includes Hawaii; J^an: Taiwan; Philip­ America Annual, 1964. In this show­ Donald Wilson pines; Hong Kong; Thailand; Singapore: ■ Dynamic Norelco Microphone IState Teachers College for one year India, with visits' to Benares, the Taj —picks up sound from the farth­ ing Mr. Wilson won the coveted Mahal, and Kashmir; Egypt; arid exten­ est points—in classroom or con­ land then transferred to WSU to sive coverage of the Middle-East and c e rt hall. Jane Wade purchase award. Holy Land, including Lebanon, Syria, Ireoeive his bachelor o f arts degree Genuine Charcoaled Jordan, and Israel, after which we visit ■ Flywheel Capstan assures lin the spring o f 1964. Turkey and Greece, with return via constant speed operation from THE PAINTING is entitled Steaks and Hamburgers Rome. All first class services ashore. starttofinish. Has 17sipsspeed. This Is a world trip of adventure, an Bass/treble tone control. SO- IN THE SUMMER o f 1964, Mr. “Green Peas.” It is primarily con­ unmatched experience and the ulti­ mate in world travel. 8000 cps frequency response jWilson was offered a teaching fel- cerned with the figure lai’gely out Open Fri. and Sal. assures wide range reproduc* lion. Records up to 3 hours on jlowskip at Wichita State and is APPLY of context, placed in juxtaposition Until 2 A.M. a single reel. jnow following his career by seek- Mrs. Mildred Evans with shapes and forms from the SEE IT, HEAR IT, TRY IT AT: ling his master of arts degree here 1740 N. Vassar area of the late 1800’s. jat the University. His major is SKAETS STEAK SHOP MU 2-8322 painting with a minor in the Mr. Wilson finds something pio- McCl e l l a n d Half a Block South of SOUND INC. [graphic arts. vocative about the subject matter Harry on Seneca HOWARD TOURS 121 N. River Blvd. Mr. Wilson is employed by the and especially the form relation­ AM 5-5266 [Wichita Art Museum ns an in- ship in which it is presented. jstructor in adult art. He assists “If the ossenee could be extract­ jMr. Sebastian Adler, director of ed it might condense down to the jtho museum, in making asses- fact that I enjoy recording the Imcnts of those parts of local Wich- 7:30 P.M. ways that I have of seeing,” said jita collections that have not yet Wilson. “ If soneone else shares my WSU FIELD HOUSE Ibeen evaluated. visions.. .fine and good.. .how uni­ MONDAY APRIL 26 During his course o f study, .Mr, versal!" TICKETS AVAILABLE IN CAC — RUDY NYDEGGER

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Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives Editorial ‘Fs Manuscript The Prophet Speaks TQQTTTT Discussion: Liquor; AnxietU INFORMATION Deadline By MIKE SNYDER, Staff Writer interpretation Revenue by the Drink March 31 The Center of Alcohol Studies at Rutgers University found in Manuscripts must be turn­ in a survey o f nine cities in five states having different liquor i Talent, Courage... ed in by March 31 for Mi­ laws that there is a “ lack of any demonstrable relating between krocosmos, a literary maga­ ing liquor controls and the problems o f alcohol consumption.” la We all thought that the purpose of coming to a univer- words, most current legislation concerning alcohol doesn't squarely through the more rapid interchange of zine published by the stu­ the problems. This is not a judgement o f alcohpl aa “good” or . dents, according to Lloyd or beneficial or harmful, but simply a recognition of the probli^ Thompson, editor. This rapid interchange is facUitaed mostly in the class- piesents. loom, ^ t the auxiliary methods include publications of all Students should deposit their The conclusion of the Rutger’s study is borne out in the S kinds. One of these pubUcations is Mikrocosmos, the sole niunuscripts in the containers Iowa which on July 5, 1963, instituted what is popularly called literary outlet for Wichita State students. placed in the CAC’s snack shop by the drink.” Since the enactment of the legi mid in front of the bookstore. Iowa has reported" a decline in drunken driving ig • Mikrocosmos is in need of more articles es- Name and address should be at­ state. And considering that drunken driving ac>, important, this Univereity tached to the work. for one-third of all arrests made by police, e.xcl hhould ^ able to flood such a request with manuscripts. A Prose, poetry, non-fiction and insignificant traffic offenses, the legislation has program the size of ours nrt work may be submitted to a major contribution to traffic safety. should be fiUed with students capable of this sort of artistic CF Gallon* Novalene Glover in the art de­ Of course, the big bonus to the state of lovn partment. states with similar alcohol policies towards alcohd Mike Snyder jn revenue. Iowa received ?1.9 million during the As to the reason for the current literary scarcity we can A cash p n ze will be awarded 4.5 months under the new program. Although this is only an L only Sues^ It might be that our loyal students are not willing for the best poem and sho'rt story trouble of preparing manuscripts or that which is entered. figure, and does not include expenditures for state administratiog ^e truely don t have the talent on campus. We reject both of the program, Iowa has been able to subsequently finance the bi The 1965 Mikrocosmos will be these suggestions because lazy students probably won’t pro- part of its higher education program with this money. entered in the National Student duce much anyway and because we believe in W SU talent Fourteen states have constitutional provisions pertaining t« J Organization contest of the follow­ regulation of liquor traffic. Kansas’ first regulation began in 1880 iu there is Un attitude of indiffer^ce ing spring. IS unforgivable. If any person has liquor sale and manufacture was prohibited entirely. Kansas has ideas and wiD not submit them to public comment, then that Each work which is turned into qualified this position somewhat, but it still lags far behind most it j ^rson IS either afraid of that comment or does not feel his Mikrocosmos will be critiqued by in modeniizing its laws and, more importantly, its outlook on aleck ideas wdl merit criticism at all. a committee of five who will judge One year ago, the office o f the Kansas Attorney General the entries. Each division has a between 500-600 estimated private clubs in Kansas operating legil y**® ®^^ present concept of uni- committee. veraity life must always combat. We therefore charge the without a license. Here is an important source of revenue going dm students to muster the courage to submit their talent ^to the “ Students who haven't done any the drain, although if liquor by the drink was instituted, the nnafe serious writing'before should not of private clubs would no doubt decline. be discouraged. All works will be THE CHARGE of liquor by the drink bringing “ open saloong-'h retiimed with a critique sheet at­ Kansas is without defense since the sale can be restricted in any n» tached,” said Thompson. ber of ways. An influential anti-liquor lobby in Topeka testifies to flj The magazine will be approxi­ fact that Kansas has always been archaic in its outlook on alcohol h mately 50 pages long. Sale of like capital punishment, Kansas has much more to gain than loseli PRSFession-- AU Mikrocosmos will begin the end of liberalizing its laws in this area. ^ April. STODEiSr Channel 3a A-: Sometimes I want to get away from it all. let B-: I know what you mean-the stream o f life is so full of extn* Editorial Staff ous duties and purposes. AB-: I think I'll lay down and die. Welcomes Criticism 0-; No brothers, attack! Throw down your plows, revolt* Wanted!! Poison pen letters. B-: We are the avant-garde o f pessimism-blessed is our mhu Send your views to the Sunflower. A -: I too will join your crusade. We negatives ore small in nimH ti't from our dai-k, underground caves we shall arise. Yes, you too may have your AB-: What is our mission, brother? name in print. Whether you ad­ vocate burning crosses in front of 0-- OnwLdT Arise, destroy the h,4l the CAC, or free Ibve, there is n 0 + : Stop! Come this way! r> space for you in the Sunflower. id A + ; Closer! ita Submit your letter to the Sun­ B4-: Faster! flower editor, today! A B +: Now! dissolution

lo ‘Regrettable Intrusion Here |tic cal Berkeley President States

m recent Berkeley demonstrationa a ? T “r^e*^ettable'’tatrasW ^ outsiders in til iba IIM>, President Wallace Sterling of Stanford Universitv ori the University of CalifonM convocation that “What has happened at Berkelev^t^nn? 1200 at an annui together spontaneous, nor is its cause to be found rnmnilf^i I'or has it been il “If occurrences such as those at ‘depersonalization’ ” of thp Within the University. Berkeley spread to other campuses, community. campus THIS desire to be a part of ^ the spread will not necessarily be Noting that colleo-P . outside world may have reivd The Sunflower haphazard like the spread of panty nationally are exnected to student involvement in the b» raids. I see m the events at Berke- from five to 10 millinn versity community itself and pol­ ‘I 005 Wilner Audit Wichita, Kansas MU 3-7561 E xt 348 icy an element that is not con- in the next 15 years contributed to its “depernA r Second class postage paid at Wichita, Kansas ce^ed merdy with free speech or Sterling said: “ Size as „ faljzation.” he suggested, ina! » publication schedules furnlsed uoon romioat with judicial priKess or with per- of depersonalization has should remind hii [na Address The Sunflower, Wichita State University. WIchVta! Kansas sona izing a university. This me ele-- potennaipotential for persist'enev ini students who use » ir'i Wichita State University. Pounded nai in 1SS6 and published each Tuesday and Friday morninr during ment ..is oneon. o f disruption and is, fntni-e.futui-e. This ^potential'0 1 0 ^ 1 w n T1° ^ d=monat.ate, demonstr w M O' Department of ^Su^naHsm of hi in itsh essence, as undemocratic as greatest where,..u ^ enrollments be m, or otherwise®*=be(rwiBe engage in-diiin-oi canhe I have no way of measuring greatest, namely in n/itlA.. ___ 1 . so as ciU»•.* \h IviR f,» persuaded that it lions in the public sector •' academic ICC Member Associated Collegiate Press Mat AMV Mww 4.U I>fCREASED size has hm, v.* exorcises and by no stit and intn. Jn threat o f legislative “ necessarily larger administrnr^^ f imagination can the eW Intercollegiate Press n fljp n r bureaucTI^v of the wall-to-wall can nve lleg PR ESS Subscription Price $6.00 per Year ilo r Kxrcntlve- icditor member L ^ t v ” i T depersonalized” to T ^be educatk ManasJng Editor mil Itnppil .munity, he noted. Where w as-den ts and faculty aliho P»'f‘c®S8.” ' - AdvcnlMiDg floainraa ...... ^ JackooB such an outcry when this real and rinr^nr. *u. be added. . Sfnir Cnrtoonlat ...... n o h r r t D. Ila ry ey ana During the naM m 5k z»i“ “ - ;;; “is.tr .-rrs jttet sity.”

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;4 w € H d Beta’s W in ALL P.A.T. MEMBERS Flying Club Activities COME TO A MEETING I The Wichita State University Flvino- .j . Intramurals Q Ised insignia and requirements for securing it at tw !'h'”"'' The Beta A team defeated the SUNDAY 3:30 AREA 3 C.A.C. Another event of interest in the FlX O u M s th Z c Ilebels Monday night in a 46 to ' 4 being scheduled for the early part of AnrV E ^ l 45 overtime victory in the intra­ come and join in the activities. A small fee till e"Lbk°™i‘t mural basketball finals. ^iightful rtde high above the city o, W ich ita tom T K™ Mar^Tr Dave Personne and Mort Shurtz tiling to h it ccimpuded led the Beta’s to victory scoring Engineering Tour 10 points each, while Chris Nelson since co-eds , The engineering department will meet today at 2*^0 n m • scored nine, Whitey McCabe eight, L of Plant II. for a tour of the Boeing Cydic k s i " and Tom Seigle seven. itel \ Everyone is welcome-rtioat and tie -h u t is asked to please park the visitor and vendor area of the parking lot If ? The Beta’s led 23-19 at half­ e, they are to call MU 4-9558. * ^ ® needs a time, but the Rebels tied it up 41 to 41 when the bell rang. However, Baha’i New Year the Beta’s won in overtime with the final score 46-45. The New Year will be celebrated on Saturday, March 20 ^ p.m at the F a im ou n t Park Recreation Building. All students In the two semi-finals, the Beta ^ited to a pot luck supper and program which will feature Mrs A team defeated the Yanks 35-3.3, Ltalie Owen. Wichita Baha’i Assembly Secretary, as speaker and the Beta B team went down According to Mrs. Owen. “ In the Baha’i scriptures, spring is . to defeat to the Rebels in a 65-39 Lnbol of s p m M rebirth. Thus, the Baha’i New Year is particularly game. .nificant as the first day o f spring, the advent o f n new cvcle h, tnkind’s spiritual evolution.” (jjoolf^rofhe^ Book Sale Dr. Loper, advisor fo r Sigma Pi Sigma, announced today that the kysics Club will be selUng, at a discount, the 45th College Edition of “Handbook o f Chemistry and Physics,” in order to raise money for club’s activities. Anyone interested in purchasing a copy of the book can contact her Dr. Loper, in the physics office, or any member of the Physics bb.

]CUN Convention Delegate ►iscusses Meeting Highlights Returning from the Midwest Model United Nations leeting in Str Louis, WSU head delegate Tim Cornett ex- hssed great excitement at the vivid realism reached at the leeting. » l forever l“The Midwest Model United Na- numitarian and Cultural Commit­ bns has been by far the most tee. holds your [lightening and interesting high­ press lit of my college career,” said THERE ARE other similar Model ►mett. UN meetings over the United poplin weave that States but the Midwest is the gives easy comfort REPRESENTING the WSU chap- largest, according to Cornett. and easy care, tan or Cornett said there is hope that of the Collegiate Council for olive green, WSU can sponsor a regional meet­ United Nations (CCUN) were sizes 28 to 36 Irnett, Jeff Brooks, Rudy Nydeg- ing of the Model UN. jr, Dave Crockett, Fred Funk He feels that the delegations 7.95 Id advisor Dr. Peter Meyer, as- were competent and well informed dniiglHB at market Itant professor of Political Sci- and this contributed greatly to the feeling of realism that was 'so » prevalent. V the seven resolutions passed the General Assembly one was bmitte

"o insure future successful dele- jtions from WSU, Cornett ad- WHY cates a system of advising from university administration with 6 political science department WORRY ing aid in the selection o f the legation. A m n HE ALSO seeks aid from the fbate Society, International Club, YOUR vA and CAC. With this group- >1 Cornett hopes fo r a perpetual, 8t-rate delegation. R A D M ^ Por the past delegation, WSU |8 received “excellent’' ratings, nett's code is “ Let’s keep it Way.’’ 1 1 would urge every individual has an mterest in intema- I.ET KELLER’ S DO IT ! m relations of the United Na- F8 to please apply for next . . . They Are Dependable . . . delegation. The reward is amic jMight and an adventure And They Have the Most Modern Shop in Town . P*^ctical education.” SEE ®^''’<>cated by Cornett are Club and an International U^tions Club. General Assembly at the PL vention represented about 85 . and universities from r to the east coast. The -composed o f a - 500-mem- r oy. was subdivided into five P committees “ aird a Security luncU. P® committees and the WSU esentation to them were: Cor- e/wiee ^ Economic and Finance; Ny- n Trusteeship Committee; AM 5-9740 ...... |{4 ' Policy and Security Com- I - .’ Crockett, Soecial Policies 111 West Waterman ^ (Between Water and Main) FARAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. • EL PASO. TEXAS l"»mittee; and Funk, Social Hu-

Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives G eologists Professor Questioiij^ G o D eep; Education Progra, By Intercollegiate Press Are we in danger of producing a generation that See M ine more years than its predecessors in educational instil By ROBERT YOUNG, but does not gain the kind of literacy that was once re Staff Reporter as the mark of an educated man? Dean David B. Truman of Co­ educated, with the except!^] Where were nine members of spelling. the WSU Geology club last Satur­ lumbia College seem.s to think According to Dr. Phyilli day? lliey were three-hundred this is the case. Declaring that gess, Associate Professor «{ feet below the surface of Kansas. “ chaos and triviality characterize too many curricula today,” Dean cation, the high schools in After meeting in the CAC park­ Truman added: “ They will not incorporate much of this a ing lot at 4 a.m. tlie members left easily be eliminated, but their hold curriculum. Sho believes that on the 200-mile trip to Pitcher, on educational progress must be ita is holding its own in Okla. reduced. vancement toward better The 300-doot descent was made The immediate urgency o f this in a Tri-State lead-zinc mine just problem lies in the response that, inside the Kansas border. Once un­ ROCK ANYONE?—Simon Mambali (left), a Tanganyika in many places, is greeting the derground the “ hard rock miners” student, and David Busbee, a University graduate student new achievements of the secondary furni^ed their own lights due to in biology, hunt for calcite crystals during a Geology Club schoolsi Dean Truman feels cer­ Dentyni the fact that there was only one tain of the value of the advanced light in the mine, and that was at field trip. These explorers are 300 feet below the surface placement movement, of efforts the base o f the shaft. T in lead-zinc mine near Pitcher, Okla. The tour was the first such as Physical Science Study Committee physics, the “ new” Down in the mine their work be­ visit to an underground mine for Mambali. THE KLEO mathematics, and new emphasis on gan. During the four hours there The members worked underground for four hours. They foreign languages. they covered approximately five GOOD GUYS LIKE miles of underg^round tunnels and covered approximately five miles of underground tunnels and Evidence indicates that by and —DENTYNE— rooms, collecting mineral speci­ rooms. large, students of today are better mens and observing the geology o f the mine. Lunch in the form of sandwiches and candy bars was eaten while on the move under­ ground. Take a Two things about the trip the club members are not likely to forget were the foul air run into Spring Jazz Break! in an old ppart o f the mine, and d C the surprising weight of a sack rjr of lead specimens. CD The return trip was livened up by the blowing o f a radiator hose M> on one car and listening to the WSU-OSU game. ..X 1... c: Debaters ■»•*• Schedule ■Mic Activities **•«5 Mi« A Missouri Valley Championship WP^ meet, Kansas Intercollegiate De­ bate League Tournament and the West Point Regional Tournament are included in the Debate Team's active schedule. Last year’s championship team, with one exception, will attend the Missouri Valley Championship meet at the University of Nebraska, in Lincoln, March 26-27. Bob Shields along with last year's’- Bob Glenn, Bob Smith and Keith Williamson will participate in the tourney. COUNT BASIE WSU HAS won the Missouri Val­ ley Championship since 1961 when p/us 24 JAZZ GROUPS they placed second to Oklahoma University. in 8-HOUR SPECTACULAR Debaters will compete today and Sunday Aft.-Eve. March 28, Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Auditorium tomorrow’ for state championship in the Kansas Intercollegiate De­ bate League Tournament at the College of Emporia campus which will determine the Junior Division JAZZ ALL OVER TOWN . f.i State Champions for this year. Attending the tourney are Bill Balthrop, Van Stone, Dan Hughes ond Eric Park. Shields and Glenn, WSU de­ COMBOS * BANDS * SOLO IBTISTS baters, are ranked in the top 16 teams in the nine state area of m Clubs, Restsurauts, Hotels anil m U tbs Departffsnt StoresI Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Wisconsin, North and South Dakota. TO R C H L IG H T PARADE— Fri. Eve. Mar. 26 THE 16 teams which are selected ★ T A IL -G A T E JA Z Z BANDW AGONS Roam the C ity-S a t Mar 27 on the basis of records for the * DIXIEUBD MRCHIMS BANDS h Shop«,«AL“ fc , past year are Invited to partici­ pate in the West Point Regional Tournament next Monday and Tues­ day at Iowa State University. Bet A Bang Together... Everyboilr’s swinging in K.C. After eight rounds o f debate, the top six teams will receive ihvitatloiiB to the National Debate Forinformitiang mite or Tournament which will be held at I Mayor, City Hall West Point, New York, in April. , Kansas City, Missouri

Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives t Shocker 5

HERfZ SRTURDHVor sr Get Rousing n 03 c ‘S 5RHDRV SPEHHl 9. ss Send-off o ONLY $ and Wichita State University stu­ o • t SU Frosh Squad Adds dents whooped and hollered the a mlla Shocker basketball team all the 4 way out to the airport yesterday flenf a new Chevrolet or other fine car all d ay Soturdoy Players To '65 Roster morning as the players were get­ or all d ay Sunday. This special low rate includes every­ , The 1965 “Pightin’ S h o cW - freshman football roster ting ready to board for Portland thing: insurance and gas. And only Hertz offers Certified & Itinues to grow as head coach George Karras for the NCAA championship finals. Service, your guarantee of complete rental satisfaction. It three New J e ^ y high school seniors will attend W ic f University classes were shorten­ State University. vvitn- ed, and the 9 a.m. class was can­ lese' ore the first to be an- —. played on the Passaic state high celled so the students could show iced of several far east out- their support. school championship team and was ling athletes who have decided ill at the Missouri Valley The rally started at the Field- Set Herti put y w In the driuer's sent I Rce school and play col- house after which the players and fans loaded up for the airport. Ite^ football here. ® undei-way on ON CAMPUS the Shocker campus and will end E OF the two end prospects Tonight the Shockers meet the STEVE HUGHES MU 6-1169 and W H 3-3132 with an intra-squad game on Ipi letters of intent was Glenn April 10. UCLA Bruins in the first-round ;er (6-3, 197 lbs.) from High- action of the tournament. Park, New Jersey. Itzer is an outstanding pass rer and was selected to the Jersey All-State high school id last fall. le other end to be announced limmie Jones (6-5, 208 lbs.) Englewood, N. J. Jhnmie is versatile with listings of letball and track high school iplishments along with foot-

A tackle or guard spot the rhtin' Shocker” frosh will have >ld Honig (6-2, 220 lbs.) a of Passaic, N. J. Honig

• J 10 Shocker ins Purchase lAA Tickets locker basketball fever is up |the Wichita State University Bt Office reported late Wed- ay that all 500 tickets allotted he University for the NCAA nanient being held in Portland, tonight and tom orrow night, been sold.

Iree aircraft left the Wichita Icipal Airport yesterday morn- |for the west coast city. Two seventy two persons, in- ng the players and University pals took the plpnes. Approxi- |ly 250 persons either drove, I the train or bus, or flew by We Don’t Have Ite aircraft.

is a real compliment to the sity as well as the city of KILLER JOE PIRO A lita that this much in ter^ t een shown in the tournament, ver ceases to amaze me that But We Do Have p« support, the. team so much go as far as Portland,” athletic coordinator, Bob ildson. Wichita's M o st Beautiful Discotheque Girls

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Wichita State University Libraries, Special Collections and University Archives j . y ■

00 THE WSU, Princeton, Michigan, UCL to o - o 'Pivot Poifit To Illnstrate Run, Shoot; Press By M IK E H A L L By MIKE HALL, Sports Editor Tonight’s NCA‘A first-round action pit two run-and-shoot type teams MICHIGAN University, althoufirh supposedly the team to beat in vnW each other in the first-round game, and in the later action Portlana lai^ will get the NCAA final, may never get the chance to get into the final tilt tomorrow night. to see two teams that have made the full-court press famous go into action. The first job the Wolverines have ahead of them may be just The two nin-andrshoot teams two clubs. Michigan defeated the would make the tournai lough enough to dethrone them from the number one spot. This test are Michigan and Princeton and Tigers earlier this season by two season so we could put ou comes in the form o f 'college player o f the year’ and the the pressing squads are Wichita points. against each other. They Princeton Tigers. and UCLA. ‘ ably the two best in the Later the UCLA Bruins meet Wooden said. Earlier this season, Princeton was leading Michigan by 12 points Neither Princeton nor Michigan the Wichita Shockers in a game 4vith five minutes to go before Bradley fouled out The Wolverines depends on its defense to win their which Coach John Wooden of UC- Not only are the two ■ c;ame back to win the game by two points with the help of all-American games. Michigan has given up 78.1 loA has “wanted to see for a long in their presses, but the . ** points a game to their opposition time.” height t^t both claim', RUSSELL HAS BEEN responsible for winning many games for while Princeton gives an average “ I was hoping the Shockers make for. an exciting gaail . I Michigan when it looked like there was no hope. Wich­ 68.5 'Points to foes. ita fans will long remember the last second 30 foot Princeton and Michigan boast jump shot Russell took to beat the Shockers earlier probably the finest two players this season by two points. and proficient scorers in the coun­ Russell has pulled this trick time and again this try. “ Player-of-the-year” Bill Brad­ things g o season and has so far been able to get away with it. ley leads Princeton with' a 29.6 Against Vanderbilt, last Saturday in the NCAA East- average and is reportedly un-stop- itii em finals, Russell scored 11 points in the final three pable. Mike Hall minutes to get the Wolverines into the Portland finals. Cazzie Russell is Michigan’s big Coke Ohio State, past NCAA winner but now one o f the last teams in player with a 25.5 average but it the Big Ten, tromped over Michigan by some 20 points as Russell was is said he can be stopped. If Rus­ on the bench with a virus. Princeton may not need Russell on the bench sell is held down the Wolverines for a victor>’, but if Russell were to have missed some of his lost second also have All-America candidate jump shots this season Michigan’s record might have been somewhat Bill Buntin at 6-foot-9. different. His one ‘big’ miss may be coming. Michigan is reported to be the PRINCETON WILL GO into this tournament much stronger than biggest major college club in the many people have been led to believe. Although playing in one of the country, but Princeton’s front line BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OP THE OOOA-OOLA COMPANY BT weakest basketball conferences, the Ivy League, the Tigers have played is not lacking, with Bradley at 6- foot-5 and center Robinson Brown THE WICHITA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPi many strong non-conference foes. at G-foot-10. Among these are fii’st ranked Michigan, third ranked St. .Joseph’s The Michigan-Princeton game and fourth ranked Providence. will be a return match between the

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NOTICE and found in CAC lobby. Thank AT you. GOLiLEGE STUDENTS, Take Notes Rapidlyl Improve Your School Grades by learning simplified short­ Owner of lost Jack handle please hand quickly. Easiest shorthand to contact borrower. HY 1-3278. transcribe. ■‘Abrevlatrlx" Mnniial and Practice Handbook—$2.ft8 post­ BRITNEY DOG—Orange and white DJ’s paid for both books. Cash, check or In color. Last seen near the Uni­ money order. National Sales & Ser­ versity. Reward for return. Call vice, Box 7112, Apex Station, Wash­ MU ?-D559. 3-23 4200 S. SENECA in gton , D. C. 20004. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ID Foreign Car Repairs IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS THAT COUNT KZ CARD for discounts in USA and 28 countries. STUDENT SHIPS to Nothing Down Europe. CHARTER FLIGHTS wUh- Easy Monthly Payments LARGE PAVED PARKING LOT 1b E u rope. W rite; Dept. CP, U.R. National Student Association, 263 VOLKSWAGEN HIGH COLD BEER AT COOL PRICES— Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. PERFORMANCE KITS AT NO 10016 ADDITIONAL COST $1.15 FOR LARGE PITCHER Call for iaformntlon. F O R S A L E MORE GIRLS PER SQUARE FOOT 1358 Plymouth, 2 door, V-8 over­ hauled. 3250 BEST BAND DST THE MID-WEST FEATURING “THE RAVENS” NIGHTLY fif F O R R E N T Largo furnished hotisc for relia­ MORE GIRLS PER SQUARE FOOT ble renter. Call MU 4-4730. 1709 N. V assar. 13 DANCE CONTESTS — PRIZES ' FOREIGN CAR LOST Sales & Service BALLOON NIGHT White leather cigarette cn.se with 01 lighter initialled A. O'B. Lost In N.S.U. ^*rina Franchlaed Healer MORE GIRLS PER SQUARE ‘FOOT Coffei* Shop Friday. Grent sen^I- ^S1 w f DniifflnM .(^AM S>102S montkl value. T3t Plea'se Atk«a A return to lost FREE BEER FOR 3 OR MORE STAG GIRLS FIRST 25 GIRLS IN FREE FRL & SAT. NO COVER ON MON. NIGHTS DON’T FORGET THE FOOTAGE m fK THE RAVENS FEATURING JIM SWINGLEY _ BASS GUITAR & VOCALIST LARRY KELLY — LEAD GUITAR ' ~ ~ ORGAN — CLAIRNET GARY COX — DRUMS

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