Jake Gyllenhaal talks about ‘Life’ and Ryan Reynolds
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ColumbiaChronicle.com
Homeless to lose refuge at Tent City » CAROLINE BOWEN
METRO REPORTER
Lake Shore Drive bridge over Wilson Avenue, snow and ice secures Mark Saulys’ tent to the cement. He has been homeless for more than a year but will trade his nylon walls for a sturdier home in a couple of weeks because of a city housing initiative, he said. “I’m worried for the people here, and I can see that they are worried about being tossed out,” Saulys said about his neighbors remaining in Uptown’s Tent City. Dozens of homeless people find refuge under the viaduct, which has often put them at odds with Chicago politicians. But construction slated to begin on the Lake Shore Drive bridges intersecting with Wilson Avenue and Lawrence Avenue this spring means time is dwindling for a place many call home, said Diane O’Connell, a staff attorney with the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless. Saulys is one of 75 homeless individuals taking part in a pilot program, headed by the Task Force to Reduce Homelessness. Designed to address chronic homelessness in the city by providing housing to people in encampments like Tent City, the program was announced April 25, 2016, in a press release from Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
SEE TENTS, PAGE 39
BELOW THE BUSY
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» WESLEY HEROLD/CHRONICLE
27 2017
College chooses new vice president for Development and Alumni Relations » ARIANA PORTALATIN CAMPUS EDITOR
appointed vice president for Development and Alumni Relations, according to a March 13 email sent to faculty and staff from President and CEO Kwang-Wu Kim. According to the email, Wax comes from the University of Iowa where he served as vice president for Main Campus Development, overseeing fundraising for the entire academic enterprise, the arts campus and athletics. Prior to that, he worked with the University of Illinois athletic development for 15 years. Wax said he is excited to have the position and wanted to join the college because Columbia’s mission and Kim’s ideas. “From the very first time we talked, I knew there was something special about Columbia and Dr. Kim,” Wax said. Kim was not available for comment as of press time. Wax’s appointment comes at a time of low alumni donations and a high turnover rate for the position since 2013, as reported May 19, 2016, by The Chronicle. Wax will replace Jon Stern, who left the college in May 2016 after less than two years. Stern succeeded Warren Chapman, who held the position on an interim basis for seven months following the departure of Patrick Sheahan, who was vice president of Development from September 2013 to January 2014. The college’s donation revenues have also continued to fall over the past few years, according to several of the college’s fiscal year budgets. For the 2014–2015 fiscal year, the college reported $7.7 million in gifts, contracts and other income—which includes donations. That number later fell to $1.4 million for 2015–2016 and further down to $1.2 million for 2016–2017. Wax said he has several goals for himself in his new position, starting with the improvement of alumni engagement and building on contributors and stakeholders to hopefully set the college up for a SHAWN WAX WAS
SEE WAX, PAGE 11
Volume 52, Issue 24
Lawmakers dispute bill to hold gun offenders accountable
March