Model-turned-activist addresses
She once appeared on the covers of \Seventeen"" and ""Sports Illustrated,"" but now Ann Simonton vehemently protests the same images which once made her famous.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Cardinal's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
395 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
She once appeared on the covers of \Seventeen"" and ""Sports Illustrated,"" but now Ann Simonton vehemently protests the same images which once made her famous.
Crikey! Welcome back to the Collegiate Hunter. I'm your host, Mike Jones, and today I am traveling to one of the most dangerous places a college student can venture. A place where the strong prey on the weak, and the only way one can survive is to adapt and travel in herds. I'm, of course, talking about Grainger Hall!
I love Halloween, but there's something I've been missing about it in the past few years: the candy. And we all know that one of the best ways to get candy is trick or treating.
This week I will be answering questions. Enjoy!
How do you feel when the minority student gains admission to the university you applied for, and you were rejected due to your color, not your academic record? In this \land of the free"" attitude that labels our cultural beliefs, some events and decisions lead us to contradict this apparent outlook.
On a windy Sunday afternoon, the Wisconsin men's soccer team (1-1 Big Ten, 7-4-1 overall) faced No. 20 Penn State (2-2 Big Ten, 7-5-0 overall). The Badgers prevailed over the Nittany Lions 2-1 in an exciting and physical match. Taking the brunt of that physical play used by PSU was junior midfielder David Martinez, the hero of the match who scored the game-winning goal at the 76:25 mark.
Well folks, I'm back. After being ambushed by a certain hyperbolic sports editor and his hetero-lifemate, I felt a little slighted.
Saturday wasn't Avon Cobourne's best day.
The City Council wore through three sets of ballots before ultimately electing Ald. Matt Sloan, District 13, as council president Tuesday night.
A UW-Madison male undergraduate died Sunday, due to sudden onset diabetes. According to a member of Chi Phi, 200 Langdon St., his fraternity, the student also had mononucleosis, which may have been a contributing factor in his death.
\I wore white gloves. I lived with my mother and father. I was not a child. I was thirty-seven years old.""
If it were set to music, the NCAA men's basketball tournament would be a threepiece movement. Each piece has its own unique characteristics, yet is defined by the relationships it has to the others.
David Hajdu gives the folk scene a thorough examination and in his book \Positively 4th Street: The Lives and Times of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Mimi Baez Farina and Richard Farina."" Hajdu follows the lives of these four characters as their interaction brings the folk era to its fruition. Starting from Greenwich Village, the book traces the romantic, sibling and professional struggles of the Baez sisters and the men they loved. Hajdu knows the reasons that they talk behind each others' backs.
Although spring break hasn't yet arrived, there are still a number of students walking around campus with perfectly tan skin. Either those students take weekend trips to the tropics, or they have visited tanning beds.
INDIANAPOLIS'It all came down to a few shots.
Nobody loves me. This I know for sure. Well yeah, my family loves me. My friends love me, too. My friend Beth would tell me that Jesus loves me. I'm not talking about that. You know what I'm talking about: passionate love, what the ancient Greeks called Eros. The kind of love that makes you nervous and excited, calm and peaceful all at once. I'm talking about the balls-out-Barry-White-screaming-thigh-sweats kind of love.
SALT LAKE CITY'Many don't realize it; many ignore it; some feel helpless in the face of it and shield their eyes'but it is real. There is poverty in the United States. I could quote some shocking numbers of poverty rates or of how many children die each year of treatable illnesses in one of the richest nations in the world, but the numbers aren't important'what matters are the faces, the individuals and the stories.
I remember walking down the long corridor in O'Hare International Airport after returning from Paris. As soon as I stepped off the plane, I realized that I would need to reconstruct the way I acted to accommodate the puritanical threads that seem to strangle American society.
Mary Schnell, a 55-year-old grandmother, sits in the hospital lounge waiting for her turn to lie under the large, beige radiotherapy machine. The lights are soft, and it is quiet in the hospital alcove, unlike in the hallway where doctors and nurses shuffle by, checking on patients. A five-year-old blond girl is wheeled by on a gurney, her parents by her side. She has just finished her treatment.
Imagine spending a Saturday afternoon throwing your body into a pool of freezing water cut out of a sheet of solid ice. After immersing yourself in below-freezing water, your body shakes and shivers and welcomes the heat of the hot tub you quickly jump into.