The Sunflower, v.128, no.16 (January 18, 2024)

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2024-01-18
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Newspaper
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College newspapers and periodicals , Student publications , Wichita State University -- History , Wichita (Kan.) -- Newspapers , Disability Rights, Education, Activism, and Mentorship , Disabilities , Medina Keiser, Isabel , Fields, Maddie , Wu, Lily , Whipple, Brandon , Glasscock, Dalton , Lefever, Shirley , McGaha, Telly , McClain, Brandon , ShelfCare Book Club , Nooner, Terry , Men's basketball , Women's basketball , Rogers, Colby , Anthony, Marrice
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The Sunflower: Official student newspaper, v.128, no. 16, Wichita, Kansas, Jauary 18, 2024. - 8 pages
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Article(s): ‘Open discussion’ -- What Wichita State gets right when accommodating students with disabilities — and areas to improve -- Student graduates with first American Sign Language bachelor’s at WSU -- Wintery-weather: Provost speaks on hazardous weather on campus -- Lily Wu, incoming Wichita City Council members sworn in -- Accommodations from page 1 -- Winter wrap-up. Catch up on Wichita State news from winter break and early this week with these Sunflower stories. -- Telly McGaha announced as new WSU Foundation president, CEO -- Student government adviser departs from Wichita State -- WSU recognizes Juneteenth as university holiday -- Now -- WSU recognizes Juneteenth as university holiday -- Women’s basketball team snaps losing streak against Memphis -- Women’s tennis comes up short in season opener -- Men’s tennis goes 1-2 against Arizona teams -- Track and field team breaks records but finishes third in Kansas Triangular in Lawrence, Kansas -- What'd you miss? Catching up on basketball from the break -- Men’s basketball allows over 100 points in loss against Memphis -- ‘Mean Girls’ musical movie adaptation is imperfect and unapologetically fun -- ‘INSANO’ is an hour of okay hip hop/trap with underlying gems -- ‘Counting the Cost’ is required reading for former Duggar fans -- Graduate students start punk band Zuzu’s Petals -- ‘Two things can be true’: Musician Marrice Anthony on collaboration, complaining and reexamining his life at 30 -- Bundling up
Photograph(s): Book and hourglass accommodations article graphic. p. 1 -- Madison (Maddie) Fields, a fall 2023 graduate, waits to have her picture taken before walking across the stage in Charles Koch Arena. Fields was the first student at Wichita State University to graduate with a bachelor’s degree in American Sign Language. p. 1 -- Students at Wichita State walk through campus bundled up on the first in-person day back to school. Wednesday was a cool 30 degrees Fahrenheit for most of the afternoon. p. 2 -- Portrait of Telly McGaha. p. 3 -- Brandon McClain speaks in a Student Government Association meeting on Dec 6. p. 3 -- Illustration of Juneteenth. p. 3 -- ShelfCare Book Club members pose for a photo. p. 3 -- Tre’Zure Jobe yells to her teammates about the next play late in the Jan. 17 game. p. 4 -- Freshman Theodora Chantava sets herself to recieve a serve. p. 4 -- Ambah Kowcun pushes past the Memphis defense during the Jan. 17 match. p. 4 -- Tre’Zure Jobe sprints down the court during the second quarter on Jan. 17. p. 4 -- Raissa Nsabua jumps to make a basket in the second quarter against Memphis. p. 4 -- Quincy Ballard fights with University of Kansas’ Kevin McCullar Jr. for possession of the ball in the second half of the matchup at the T-Mobile Arena in Kansas City, Missouri. Ballard scored 10 points and four rebounds during his 19 minutes of play on Dec. 30. p. 5 -- After defeating Tulane University, senior guard Aniya Bell celebrates on the sidelines. The Shockers defeated the Green Wave by three points, 63-60 on Dec. 30. p. 5 -- Kenny Pohto looks around for a teammate to pass the ball to during the Dec. 10 game against South Dakota State. Pohto scored nine points and 13 rebounds. p. 5 -- Raissa Nsabua runs past the Temple defense to make an attempt at the basket. Nsabua played for 13 minutes, and scored one point and one rebound. p. 5 -- Xavier Bell runs past the Memphis defense on Jan. 14. Bell scored three of his seven attempted field goals and three of four free throws. p. 5 -- Portrait of Monique Bever, reporter. p. 6 -- Portrait of Tyler Guthrie, columnist. p. 6 -- Portrait of Sascha Harvey, opinion editor. p. 6 -- Counting the Cost book cover. p. 6 -- Zuzu’s Petals, made up of Emmalie Hurla, Jack Anderson and Kyle Hall, perform songs from their debut album, Roses & Thorns. The band describe themselves as a Midwest poet punk band. p. 7 -- Vocalist Kyle Hall performs at Kirby’s Beer Store with Zuzu’s Petals on Jan. 13. p. 7 -- Photo of Wichita rapper Marrice Anthony. p. 7 -- Natsuki Doi, a student at Wichita State, walks through campus on the first in-person day back to school. Wednesday, Jan. 17 was a cool 30 degrees Fahrenheit most of the afternoon. p. 8 -- Two classmates chat as they walk past the Rhatigan Student Center on Wednesday morning. After in-person classes were made remote on Tuesday, Jan. 16, Wednesday marked the first day of in-person classes at Wichita State. p. 8 -- Lenora Callins, a student at Wichita State, walks from the parking lot near Elliott Hall. Callins, and other students, braved the cold to come back for the first in-person class on Wednesday, Jan. 17. p. 8 -- A trio of classmates make their way out of Hubbard Hall after their first in-person class of the semester. p. 8 -- A student at Wichita State walks through campus on the first in-person day back to school. p. 8 -- A student makes her way toward the RSC to take shelter against Wednesday’s cold wind. p. 8 -- A Shocker Hall resident cruises to class on his electric unicycle. While most sidewalks and roads were obstructed by snow last week, campus walkways were traversable by foot, bike and unicycle in time for Wednesday’s in-person classes. p. 8 -- A student leaving Shocker Hall tightens her scarf as she makes her way to class. Temperatures on Wednesday morning were just above freezing as students, faculty and staff commuted to campus. p. 8 -- Caitlin Nolen, Student Advocacy Coordinator in Student Engagement, Advocacy & Leadership (SEAL), zips up her jacket before heading out into the cold outside the Rhatigan Student Center. After the university removed to remote operations on Tuesday, Jan. 16, normal operations continued the next day. p. 8
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Wichita State University
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The Sunflower
v.128. no.16
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