Chicago police officers carry Bernie Sanders, 21, to a police wagon from a civil rights demonstration at West 73rd Street and South Lowe Avenue in August 1963. He was charged with resisting arrest, found guilty and fined $25. He was a University of Chicago student at the time. (Tom Kinahan/Chicago Tribune)
The Champaign native is the most decorated U.S. woman in Winter Olympics history. She competed in four Olympics (1984, 1988, 1992, 1994) and won a record five gold medals, plus one bronze.
Blair retired from competition in 1995.

2016: A Chicago Tribune archival photo of a young man being arrested in 1963 at a South Side protest shows U.S. senator from Vermont and then-Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders, his campaign confirmed, bolstering the candidate’s narrative about his civil rights activism.

The black-and-white photo shows a 21-year-old Sanders, then a University of Chicago student, being taken by Chicago police toward a police wagon. An acetate negative of the photo was found in the Tribune’s archives, said Marianne Mather, a Chicago Tribune photo editor.
“Bernie identified it himself,” said Tad Devine, a senior adviser to the campaign, adding that Sanders looked at a digital image of the photo. “He looked at it — he actually has his student ID from the University of Chicago in his wallet — and he said, ‘Yes, that indeed is (me).’” Sanders was traveling near Reno, Nevada, on the eve of the state’s Democratic presidential caucuses.

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