Arts & Culture: Theater Wit brings its adap-
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tation of “Mr. Burns, a Post-Electric Play” to the Chicago stage, See pg. 19
Online exclusive video
Bistro Campagne is a French restaurant with a farm-to-table cuisine
Opinions: The Chronicle endorses Rahm Emanuel, See pg. 34
SPRING 2015
WEEKS LEFT
No. 1 Non-Daily College Newspaper in the Nation MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2015
THE OFFICIAL NEWS SOURCE OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO
VOLUME 50, ISSUE 19
Lou Foglia THE CHRONICLE
Mayoral candidates get candid about Chicago
WILLIE WILSON MATT MCCALL Metro Editor WITH LITTLE MORE than a week before the election, the only thing Chicago’s mayoral candidates seem to agree on is that stripping Little League team Jackie Robinson West of their national title was a travesty. Each candidate shared his vision for Chicago at the Feb. 11 National Association of Black Journalists-sponsored mayoral forum hosted in Film Row Cinema at the 1104 S. Wabash Ave. Building as the mayoral race nears its Feb. 24 conclusion. Students, professors and administrators, such as President and CEO Kwang-Wu Kim, Dean of the School of Media Arts Robin Bargar, and Senior Vice President and Provost Stan Wearden, attended the event. After waiting for the candidates to arrive, all of whom were late,
JESUS “CHUY” GARCIA
RAHM EMANUEL
BOB FIORETTI
WILLIAM “DOCK” WALLS
the moderators from NABJ hastily called each up to give a short speech before answering audiencegenerated questions. The forum
tion. Now, eight out of 10 students graduate, he said. Emanuel also championed the Chicago Star Scholarship program,
egated to an educational system that did not provide a job or a career in the same way Columbia’s providing you a ticket to your future,” Emanuel said. As the former White House Chief of Staff, Emanuel mentioned his friendship with the president multiple times during his 20minute talk. “The City of Chicago is known as the city that works,” Emanuel said. “I will not rest until it works for everyone.” Candidate William “Dock” Walls contradicted Emanuel’s rosy outlook, claiming that institutional inequality is the reason the city needs new leadership. Walls, who was the chief scheduler for former mayor Harold Washington and who has run for mayor three consecutive times, is the least visible candidate in the race. He was not invited to speak in the first televised debate.
However, he said his experience with Washington qualifies him for the office. Demanding economic and social justice for residents living in impoverished black communities, Walls said Emanuel’s administration has fostered economic development in predominantly white communities while largely ignoring the plight of black communities on the South and West sides. Walls said there are two Chicagos, “world class” and “underclass.” “World class Chicago is safe, it’s beautiful, it’s robust and full of resources and unlimited opportunities,” Walls said. “Then there’s that underclass Chicago: Decaying neighborhoods; unsafe streets; people dodging potholes and bullets; abusive, trigger-happy police and few city services; no jobs;
I will not rest until [Chicago] works for everyone. — Rahm Emanuel was structured so that no two candidates were present at the same time, and each section took on a different atmosphere. Incumbent Rahm Emanuel was the first candidate to speak, lauding the successes of his first term: Four balanced budgets and improvements to Chicago Public Schools, including a 40 percent increase in after-school activities and an increased graduation rate. Four years ago, 42 percent of CPS students were dropping out before gradua-
which allows CPS students who graduate with at least a 3.0 GPA to pursue an associate’s degree at any of the seven City Colleges of Chicago for free, the second-largest community college system in the country. The program served as a model for President Barack Obama’s proposal to offer free community college tuition, Emanuel said. “More adults and kids go through that system than all four-year institutions combined in the city of Chicago, and they were being rel-
xx SEE FORUM, PG. 43
Enrollment declines, national average rises JACOB WITTICH Campus Editor
WHILE THE NATIONAL enrollment of
students at four-year private, nonprofit colleges has increased in recent years, Columbia, like other private colleges in Illinois, has suffered continuous enrollment declines. The college’s overall enrollment dropped 6.9 percent from the Spring 2014 semester to the Spring 2015 semester while retention rates increased, meaning more students returned between the Fall and Spring semesters this year than last year, according to Senior Vice President and Provost Stan Wearden.
Students remember UNC victims • PAGE 3
Despite the enrollment decline, college officials are viewing the slight increase in retention to 90.3 percent from last year’s rate of 90 percent as a success, Wearden said. “I consider that to really be a positive sign of a couple things,” said Wearden. “One is I think it is a sign of the improving quality of our students themselves, and also I think it’s a sign of the impact of our increased financial aid.” Wearden said 72.6 percent of incoming freshmen last fall received scholarship support from the college—a 12.1 percent increase from the previous year. Additionally, 48.3
xx SEE ENROLLMENT, PG. 10
Quidditch captains look to compete • PAGE 13
Independent music makes noise in industry • PAGE 22
Chicago tourism breaks city record in 2014 • PAGE 37 T HE COLUMBIA C HRONICLE