Pulp
Proverbs illustrate Jamaican activist's political messages
By Jackie Saunders
Waving his hands and reaching for his water bottle, the Jamaican-American author and activist informs his audience there are more profane proverbs he could entertain them with, but instead he will go with his favorite. "You will soon learn how the water walks and finds it's way into a pumpkin belly," said Thomas Glave in perfect Jamaican Patois.
All in the family: Chabad house extends traditional branch of Judaism to community
By Meredith Bowen
Amid the shifting colors of scarves and ski jackets in the hustle of Schine Student Center, Rabbi Yitzchak Creeger stands out. He and his eldest son, Schneur, 4, have become local figures of sorts throughout the past semester. The father dressed in the traditional black jacket, hat and beard of Chasidic rabbis, and his son, his stop-you-in-your tracks red hair topped with a pint-size yarmulke, are hard to miss, handing out fliers around the High Holidays or tabling in Schine.
Speaker outlines evolutionary identity of the disabled
By Christine Laubenstein
Being disabled is hard enough, but not knowing oneself may make life just as difficult. Lennard J. Davis, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, addressed that topic to a packed room yesterday afternoon in his lecture, titled "Disability and Identity, Rethinking Normalcy.
Symposium provides forum for progressive artistic voices
By Heather Dennehy
Judging by the snapshots to the dark room, every photographed image carries a personal message. Once cropped, framed and put on display, the given picture communicates with a shared audience on a universal level exceeding the boundaries of race, gender and class.
Fact of Myth: Keystone or Coors?
By Taylor Engler
Some time ago, the party gods descended upon Earth to save the souls of college students from sobriety. They declared that the beer pong cup runneth over while the pockets stay stuffed with leftover cash for early morning munchie runs. To fulfill their prophecies these gods gave the gift of Keystone Light.
Top 5: Conversations to wiretap
Some time ago, the party gods descended upon Earth to save the souls of college students from sobriety. They declared that the beer pong cup runneth over while the pockets stay stuffed with leftover cash for early morning munchie runs. To fulfill their prophecies these gods gave the gift of Keystone Light.
Spring Break
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