Arts & Culture: Bastille, Grizfolk charm sold-out crowd at Aragon Entertainment Center, See pg. 17
7
Exclusive online video
LeAlan Jones speaks to First Year Seminar students
Opinions: Assisted suicide should be legalized nationally, See pg. 32
FALL 2014
WEEKS LEFT
No. 1 Non-Daily College Newspaper in the Nation MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2014
THE OFFICIAL NEWS SOURCE OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO
VOLUME 50, ISSUE 9
Moore: ‘Ask any damn question you want’ CARISSA DEGEN Assistant Campus Editor
Carolina Sánchez THE CHRONICLE Michael Moore answered student questions and talked about his documentaries and upcoming projects on Oct. 22 at a last-minute Q-and-A event organized by Columbia’s cinema art + sciences department and the Chicago International Film Festival at Film Row Cinema in the 1104 S. Wabash Ave. building.
A SURPRISE VISIT from Oscar-winning documentarian Michael Moore on Oct. 22 drew hundreds of students, faculty and staff to Film Row Cinema in the 1104 S. Wabash Ave. building. Known for his documentaries “Bowling for Columbine” and “Fahrenheit 9/11,” Moore visited the college as part of the Chicago International Film Festival. “You need to be secure in what you already believe in and your ability to communicate what you want to say in your film,” Moore told students. “Why do you feel like you need to find somebody who agrees with you? You should be secure enough in your own filmmaking.” The Q-and-A with Moore gave students an opportunity to directly
xx SEE MOORE, PG. 9
YouTube provides platform for mental illness peer support
JACOB WITTICH
Assistant Sports & Health Editor MANY PEOPLE WITH severe mental ill-
nesses, specifically schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and bipolar disorder, are turning to YouTube to share their experiences with the illness or seek peer support, according to a recent study published Oct. 15 in PLOS ONE. The study, led by John Naslund, a Ph.D. student in the Health Policy Department at Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, analyzed 3,044 comments posted to 19 YouTube videos uploaded by people with the three
disorders to identify themes of peer support shared within the online community. He found that some people living with mental illnesses are finding ways to build their own support systems online. “We observed peer support in four main areas based on the videos and their comments: minimizing a sense of isolation and providing hope, finding support through connecting with peers, coping with day-to-day challenges and learning from shared experiences in terms of medication use and seeking a diagnosis,” Naslund said.
xx SEE YOUTUBE, PG. 14
AP EXCHANGE Four Chicago hospitals have been chosen to treat possible Ebola patients if an outbreak occurs. Their staffs are being specially prepared and trained.
Chicago hospitals prepare for Ebola ALEXA RUFFINO Assistant Metro Editor
Lou Foglia THE CHRONICLE
Alumna Lena Waithe discusses career • PAGE 3
RUSH UNIVERSITY MEDICAL Center and three other Chicago hospitals have been selected at the request of Mayor Rahm Emanuel to provide care to patients in the event of an Ebola diagnosis in Chicago. In Addition to RMC, 1653 W. Congress Parkway, Ann & Robert
Chicago Fire’s smoldering season • PAGE 11
H. Lurie Children’s Hospital, 22 E. Chicago Ave.; Northwestern Memorial Hospital, 251 E. Huron St.; and the University of Chicago Medical Center, 5841 S. Maryland Ave have been chosen to treat possible Ebola patients. “If there is a situation where someone might be brought in [because they] maybe had one or two of the potential symptoms, but
Take charge of student debt • PAGE 20
weren’t further tested, [then they would go to one of the four hospitals],” said Deb Song, assistant director of media relations at RMC. Although Ebola is not easily spread from one person to another, strict precautions are being taken to prevent the communication of the disease. According to an Oct. 20
xx SEE EBOLA, PG. 38
Violence as a disease: how to fight it • PAGE 35 T HE COLUMBIA C HRONICLE