Students to blame for low graduation rates
xx PAGE 32 RIC Blawkhawks sled hockey Web-Exclusive Video
The official news source of Columbia College Chicago
February 28, 2011
www.ColumbiaChronicle.com
Volume 46, Issue 21
Cromer comes home
Brock Brake THE CHRONICLE
Alumnus and past Columbia theater professor David Cromer speaks at the “Conversation in the Arts” at the 1104 Center, 1104 S. Wabash Ave. Cromer recently won the MacArthur Fellowship Grant and is working on upcoming plays with celebrities Nicole Kidman, James Franco and Ben Stiller.
Celebrated graduate returns to college as part of speaking series by Sam Charles Campus Editor COLUMBIA WELCOMED a former student
and professor to share his experiences as an award-winning theater director and stage actor. David Cromer, who received a
MacArthur Foundation Grant in September 2010, was described by the foundation as someone “who is reinvigorating classic American plays and illuminating their relationship to the present.” Cromer, 47, came back to the college as the second speaker in this year’s installment of “Conversations in the Arts” on Feb. 23 to give his insight in how theater is evolving, the different directions it is moving in and how Columbia prepared
him for life after college. “Columbia shows you how to create from very little and how to self-motivate,” Cromer said. “This place is what you make of it.” He left Columbia in 2008 to work as a full-time freelance theater director in New York City. In some of his upcoming productions, he’ll be working with highprofile film actors including Ben Stiller, James Franco and Nicole Kidman.
The MacArthur Foundation awards $500,000, which the recipient gets over the course of five years. On its website, the foundation states “the [grant] is not a reward for [a] past accomplishment, but rather an investment in a person’s originality, insight and potential.” “I’m going to live on [the grant],” Cromer said. “Prior to the last two years
cally insensitive remarks in class. discriminate against Smiley, which is “After considering all of the evidence good for the students to know and other in its totality, Smiley has failed to point employees to know,” Kelly said. to sufficient evidence In December 2008, to show that ColumSmiley, who is of Palbia’s given reason for estinian origin, was terminating employI think it’s important for the commu- notified by Stephament was a pretext,” nie Downs, assistant the court order stated. nity to know Columbia acted respon- director of Student Because of the loss, sibly when a student complained of Affairs, of a Jewish she will have to pay discrimination against him.” student’s complaint Columbia $3,300 in that she had made - Annice Kelly costs that will cover anti-Semitic coma variety of fees it incurred during the ments in class. On Jan. 16, 2009, Barbara lawsuit, said Annice Kelly, vice president Calabrese, chair of the Radio Department, of Legal Affairs and General Counsel. and Louise Love, assistant provost at the “The court found [Columbia] did not time and now the vice president of Aca-
demic Affairs, met with Smiley to inform her of the complaints. The complaint led to an investigation and Smiley’s termination from the college. Love signed an affidavit, stating she believed Smiley “did not observe professional decorum and did not understand the boundaries between faculty and student,” the opinion noted. Columbia’s investigation into the allegations was thorough enough to serve as grounds for termination, the court opinion concluded, noting “it was not unreasonable for Columbia to expect that Smiley would teach her classes without
xx SEE CITA, PG. 7
Columbia wins discrimination battle
Former radio professor loses discrimination lawsuit, forced to reimburse college for costs by Amanda Murphy Assistant Campus Editor
SURIYA SMILEY’S claim that Columbia
discriminated on the basis of ethnicity when terminating the former adjunct professor was recently dismissed by U.S. federal court. On Nov. 2, 2010, Judge Samuel Der Yeghian issued an opinion that Smiley failed to prove Columbia discriminated when investigating the claim she made ethni-
Health & Fitness
» PG. 11
Arts & Culture
» PG. 22
Metro
» PG. 36
xx SEE SMILEY, PG. 7
INDEX Campus 2 H&F 11 A&C 17
Renegades struggling for rides
Fear Experiment pushes performers
2nd Ward results
Commentary 32 Metro 35