Columbia Chronicle College Publications

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Columbia Chronicle College Publications Columbia College Chicago Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago Columbia Chronicle College Publications 12-3-1990 Columbia Chronicle (12/03/1990) Columbia College Chicago Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle Part of the Journalism Studies Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation Columbia College Chicago, "Columbia Chronicle (12/3/1990)" (December 3, 1990). Columbia Chronicle, College Publications, College Archives & Special Collections, Columbia College Chicago. http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle/108 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the College Publications at Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. It has been accepted for inclusion in Columbia Chronicle by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. TheColmnbia Cluonide VOLUME 24 NUMBER 8 COLUMBIA COLLEGE, CmCAGO, ILLINOIS DECEMBER 3, 1990 Dowalibys' lawyer called 'incompetent' Greylord offenses, [and] that in­ Grcylord were tax problems," csted in writing a book about the and other sources has gone to the By Lance Cummings fonnation was withheld from the Mcczyk said. "That situation had Dowalibys rather than in the Dowalibys." Edilor.in..cIa~J Dowalibys." absolutely no affcct on my perfor­ Dowaliby's best interests. Cynthia Dowaliby decided to Pro tess, also an associate mance in hand1ing their case. My Protess responded by telling go public after almost two years David.Dowaliby, found guilty professor at Northwestern problem was over. I had already the ChronJ'CJe that, as far as he of silence about the case by con­ in May of strangling his adopted University's Medill School of been through the attorney dis­ was concerned, "Meczyk exened senting to tell her story through daughter Jaclyn, can lay much of Journalism, said that Meczyk ciplinary procedure and I had unus ual and unfortunate in- PrOlCSS and another writer. The the blame for his conviction on been okayed to continue practic­ Tribune eventually published the defense attorney Ralph Meczyk, ing. resulting sLOry in a two-pan fea­ unethical prosecutorial tactics "I just didn't know how "Besides. I think the record "I will make no money ture, in 1un e. and overwhelmingly negative stands for itself," Meczyk said. Sinoe he became knowledge­ pre-trial publicity, according to tbe system works. I hardly "The entire appeal is based on from this. I only want to able about the case, Protess has Chicago journalist David Protess. groundwork thal Larry (partner been an unabashed champion of The charges came as Protess, ever read a newspaper or Larry Hyman) and I laid during belp the Dowalibys get David Dowaliby's innocence. David's wife Cynthia Dowaliby, the trial. If the defense had been " I believe that David and Peggy O'Connor, president watched television news." incompetent, that would be the on with their lives." Dowaliby is innocent," Protess of the David Dowaliby Freedom basis of the appeal, not the said. "And I think that there is no Committee, spoIce to a gathering ~yntbia Dowaliby meritorious issues that the appeal -David Protess higher calling in the profession of of Columbia journalism students is actually based upon. And we journalism than to try to correct and faculty members in a packed mismanaged a key defense wit­ brought those issues up during the lluence over the Dowalibys" an injustice or to right a wrong." Wabash Building classroom ness, and challenged Meczyk's trial. If we had no~ the defense while he defended them. Speaking about th e trial , Tuesday about events surround­ handling of cenain photographic would have waived its right to "} have already committed to Protess, Dowaliby and O'Connor ing the highly publicized evidence during the trial. appeal them, and that would have donate any proceeds from any­ all said that they fell the decision _ Dowaliby murder case. Meczyk told the Chronic/e, been incompetent. But we did our thing I publish in connection with not to have the Dowalibys take "I think tha~ for the record, however, thatProtess "is treading job." the Dowaliby case to the the wimess stand in their own Ralph Meczyk provided the on very dangerous ground" by Meczyk went on 10 say that he Dowalibys," Protess said. "I will defense, a decision they said waS Dowalibys with an incompetent making such allegations. felt Protess was, "exerting an un­ make no money from this. I only made at Meczyk. 's urging, was a defense," Protess said. "At the "The Dowalibys knew the full usual. Svengali-like influence want to help the Dowalibys geton mistake, Dowaliby said that she time, he was on federal probation extent of my tax problem. AU the over the Dowalibys," and implied with their lives. Every penny I've for committing Operation problems that stemmed from that Protess may be more inler- earned from the Chicago Tribune See DOWALIBY, page 2 New novel by ex-student tells tale of racism By Tara Dubsky StnffWrittr When -Jacqueline Dixon en­ rolled at Columbia in 1982, she wasn't aiming to bea writer. And .. she had no idea her first book would be published by the time she was 26 years old. But that's what happened in October, when "East End/Wesl End Kids" was published by Winston-Derek Publishers. Inc, The story focuses on the inner struggle of a young black girl who tries to find acceptance and over­ come racial hatred and violence while attending a predominately white Catholic school with a handful of other black students. "It was written to hopefully promote pos itive racial rela­ ti ons," Dixon said. "I think it touches on a very impo rtant issue." Dixon, who is now a video repair technicinn. enrolled at Greenpeace official urges journalists to become activists Columbia in 1982. fresh out of high sc hool and undecided about By Cynthia Dopke lions program. of values and principles that I a major. She said she signed up Cllronick Correspondent 10urnalists and scientists have "Losing objectivity would be bring everywhere I go. At least for a writing workshop because it typically followed the Western a dangerous thing for the press LO I'm honest enough to admit it" was a prerequisite, but developed Environmental journalists practicc of separating ideas and do," Lyon said, asking Pines what Most e nvironmental news an interest in writing that con­ must abandon objectivity and be­ e motions, which ultimate ly would happen if political jour­ stories, Pines said, contain statis­ tinued after she dropped out of come environmental advocates to reduces people to objects, Pines nalist sided with the Republican tics and figures that provide only sc hool in 1984. warn the public of the dangers of said. ''The teaching of separation party. "I still think il 'S an ideal superficial information. She cited Dixon said she lost interest in degrading the environment, ac­ is pan of the problem. We must that should be striven for on the the Chicago Sun-Times' inves­ sc hooi"bccausc she was uncertain cording to a Greenpeace official. engage and survive or disengage job." tigation of the Robbins garbage about her direction, but years later "I do not think objectivity is a and watch disaster fall down on Lyon also asked Pines if she incinerator as an example of when her writing began to now viable goal," Greenpeaoe Mid­ our heads." expects every joumalist to share good, but rare, e nvironmental forcefully. she attributed a great west Executive Director Sharon Environmental journalists her views, He accused her of joumalism. deal of it to Don Bodey, a former Pines told an audience of swdents have served a power structure demanding thal " not only should Environmental stories made Columbia staff member who and staff at Columbia. "We have comprised of white male scien­ we be writing more slories, but headlines around Earth Day last taught the w0rkshop and, Dixon to engage in what is a planetary tists, Pines charged. we should share your spedfic April, but the infatuation was said, showed incredible faith in aisis." But Jeff Lyon, co-director of commiunent." shon-lived, Pines added. her. Pines spoke at a November Columbia's Science Writing pro­ " I think it is morally wrong "My phone was off the hock When Dixon's attendance in seminar or ganized b y the gram and Chicago Tribune and unjustifiable that there arc two weeks before Earth Day," Bodey'sclass waned, she said, he college's Sludents for a Beuer Magazine writer, said objectivity corporatio ns making obscene Pines said, "and two days after, I gave her an ultimatum - that she World group and the Science, is a necessary ingredient of good profits Out of poisoning people," had to beg the press lO continue Technology, and Communica- journalism. Pines replied. "{ come with a set covering the issues," See NOVEL, page 2 The Columbia Chronicle 2 1990 against Cynthia. A spokesman for the law firm of Jenner & Block, Dowaliby which is handling the Dowaliby from page I appeal pro bono, agreed with Protess' come nLi o n that without Mann's teslimony, Cook County aml David had tx) Lh wantcd to Criminal Court Judge Richard E. lol.l k. l',,;.lr..: h juror in Illl~ l~yCS <UHJ Neville mi ght well have directed lil'(hirc t11 l~i r inll\lI..'CllIX . bUI that their inrxpcri(' [l('c wi th 11K' legal a verdi ct in favor of David, as sys te m kd thl'lll \0 fllilow well as Cynthia. r-.kcl.y k 's ad .... ic(:. Cynthia Dowaliby was ac· "WI.' kld several n lll\'C r s ;,J ­ quitted of charges against her in lions wi th our :tHorne), aho u[ connection with her daughter's wlwllwr or nOI we should wstify ," murder when Neville cited in suf­ Dow~liiby tuld me.
Recommended publications
  • Works on Giambattista Vico in English from 1884 Through 2009
    Works on Giambattista Vico in English from 1884 through 2009 COMPILED BY MOLLY BLA C K VERENE TABLE OF CON T EN T S PART I. Books A. Monographs . .84 B. Collected Volumes . 98 C. Dissertations and Theses . 111 D. Journals......................................116 PART II. Essays A. Articles, Chapters, et cetera . 120 B. Entries in Reference Works . 177 C. Reviews and Abstracts of Works in Other Languages ..180 PART III. Translations A. English Translations ............................186 B. Reviews of Translations in Other Languages.........192 PART IV. Citations...................................195 APPENDIX. Bibliographies . .302 83 84 NEW VICO STUDIE S 27 (2009) PART I. BOOKS A. Monographs Adams, Henry Packwood. The Life and Writings of Giambattista Vico. London: Allen and Unwin, 1935; reprinted New York: Russell and Russell, 1970. REV I EWS : Gianturco, Elio. Italica 13 (1936): 132. Jessop, T. E. Philosophy 11 (1936): 216–18. Albano, Maeve Edith. Vico and Providence. Emory Vico Studies no. 1. Series ed. D. P. Verene. New York: Peter Lang, 1986. REV I EWS : Daniel, Stephen H. The Eighteenth Century: A Current Bibliography, n.s. 12 (1986): 148–49. Munzel, G. F. New Vico Studies 5 (1987): 173–75. Simon, L. Canadian Philosophical Reviews 8 (1988): 335–37. Avis, Paul. The Foundations of Modern Historical Thought: From Machiavelli to Vico. Beckenham (London): Croom Helm, 1986. REV I EWS : Goldie, M. History 72 (1987): 84–85. Haddock, Bruce A. New Vico Studies 5 (1987): 185–86. Bedani, Gino L. C. Vico Revisited: Orthodoxy, Naturalism and Science in the ‘Scienza nuova.’ Oxford: Berg, 1989. REV I EWS : Costa, Gustavo. New Vico Studies 8 (1990): 90–92.
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia College Chicago Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago
    Columbia College Chicago Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago Alumni Newsletters Alumni Spring 1998 re: Columbia Columbia College Chicago Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/alumnae_news This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation re: Columbia College Chicago (Spring 1998), Alumni Magazine, College Archives & Special Collections, Columbia College Chicago. http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/alumnae_news/58 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Alumni at Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. It has been accepted for inclusion in Alumni Newsletters by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. Success rary n November 21, 1997, With participants ranging from the Presidenl's Club third ambilious students to learned pro­ 0 annual Premier Event fessors, the winner at the end of transformed Lhe Colum­ the evening was 10 year old Jared bia College Library into five floors Bailey, son of English department of spectacular entertainment, professor George Bailey. Jared hap­ The Parker family food, and fun attended by more pily received his award of a goody helps Jeanne Parker celebrate than 300 friends and supporters. bag fi!Jed with Columbia College her Li brarian The normally hushed library mugs, T-shirt, and other treasures. Emeritus award. From left: Frank pulsed with life as guests lhronging The Premier Event also fea­ Green, Marla each floor were greeted by African tured an important announcement Green, Jeanne Parker, AI Parker drumming, Easl Indian dance, jazz by President's Club co-chair and Neil Parker; piano, poetry readings, and other Marcia Lazar.
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia Downtown Historic Resources Survey National Register Evaluations
    COLUMBIA Downtown Historic Resource Survey Final Survey Report September 28, 2020 Staci Richey, Access Preservation with Dr. Lydia Brandt Intentionally Left Blank Columbia Downtown Historic Resource Survey City of Columbia, Richland County, S.C. FINAL Report September 28, 2020 Report Submitted to: City of Columbia, Planning and Development Services, 1136 Washington Street, Columbia, S.C. 29201 Report Prepared By: Access Preservation, 7238 Holloway Road, Columbia, S.C. 29209 Staci Richey – Historian and Co-Author, Access Preservation Lydia Mattice Brandt, PhD – Architectural Historian and Co-Author, Independent Contractor Intentionally Left Blank This program receives Federal financial assistance for identification and protection of historic properties. Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, as amended, the U.S. Department of the Interior prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, disability or age in its federally assisted programs. If you believe you have been discriminated against in any program, activity, or facility as described above, or if you desire further information, please write to: Office for Equal Opportunity National Park Service 1849 C Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20240 Table of Contents Acknowledgements Lists of Figures, Tables, and Maps Abbreviations Used in Notes and Text 1. Project Summary 1 2. Survey Methodology 4 3. Historic Context of Columbia 6 Colonial and Antebellum Columbia 6 Columbia from the Civil War through World War I 16 Columbia between the Wars: 1920s through World War II 35 Mid-Century Columbia: 1945-1975 44 Conclusion 76 4.
    [Show full text]
  • The Comics Grid. Journal of Comics Scholarship. Year One, Edited by Ernesto Priego (London: the Comics Grid Digital First Editions, 2012)
    The Comics Grid Journal of Comics Scholarship Year One Contributor Jeff Albertson James Baker Roberto Bartual Tiago Canário Esther Claudio Jason Dittmer Christophe Dony Kathleen Dunley Jonathan Evans Michael Hill Nicolas Labarre Gabriela Mejan Nina Mickwitz Renata Pascoal s Nicolas Pillai Jesse Prevoo Ernesto Priego Pepo Pérez Jacques Samson Greice Schneider Janine Utell Tony Venezia Compiled by Ernesto Priego Peter Wilkins This page is intentionally blank Journal of Comics Scholarship Year One The Comics Grid Digital First Editions • <http://www.comicsgrid.com/> Contents Citation, Legal Information and License ...............................................................................................6 Foreword. Year One ...................................................................................................................................7 Peanuts, 5 October 1950 ............................................................................................................................8 Ergodic texts: In the Shadow of No Towers ......................................................................................10 The Wrong Place – Brecht Evens .........................................................................................................14 Sin Titulo, by Cameron Stewart, page 1 ...............................................................................................16 Gasoline Alley, 22 April 1934 ...............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Robert Motherwell on Paper: Gesture, Variation, and Continuity University of Richmond Museums
    University of Richmond UR Scholarship Repository Exhibition Brochures University Museums 1997 Robert Motherwell on Paper: Gesture, Variation, and Continuity University of Richmond Museums Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/exhibition-brochures Part of the Book and Paper Commons, Fine Arts Commons, and the Painting Commons Recommended Citation University of Richmond Museums. Robert Motherwell on Paper: Gesture, Variation, and Continuity, October 17 to December 13, 1997, Marsh Art Gallery, University of Richmond Museums. Richmond, Virginia: University of Richmond Museums, 1997. Exhibition Brochure. This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Museums at UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Exhibition Brochures by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EXHIBITION GUIDE Robert Motherwell on Paper GESTURE, VARIATION, AND CONTINUITY OCTOBER 17 TO DECEMBER 13, 1997 MARSH ART GALLERY, UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND The exhibition is organized and ci rculated by the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery, Columbia University. At the Marsh Art Gallery, University of Richmond, the exhibition is made possible with the generous support of the University of Richmond Cultural Affairs Committee. An accompanying exhibition catalogue is available, published by Harry N . Abrams, Inc ., in association with the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m., (closed Thanksg iving Week, 11 / 25-12/ l ). MARSH ART GALLERY George M . Modlin Center for the Arts, University of Richmond , Virgin ia (804) 289-8276 FOREWORD This exhibition guide and extended copy on the wall labels were developed as part of an art history course, Abstract art is stripped bare of other things in order to "The Modern in America," taught during the 1997 Foll intensify its rhythms, spatial intervals, and color structure, Semester at the University of Richmond by Stephen Addiss, a process of emphasis.
    [Show full text]
  • The Squirrel Machine Online
    7PIW6 [Ebook pdf] The Squirrel Machine Online [7PIW6.ebook] The Squirrel Machine Pdf Free Hans Rickheit audiobook | *ebooks | Download PDF | ePub | DOC Download Now Free Download Here Download eBook #1808512 in Books 2013-09-07Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 10.00 x .60 x 7.10l, 1.25 #File Name: 1606996460192 pages | File size: 40.Mb Hans Rickheit : The Squirrel Machine before purchasing it in order to gage whether or not it would be worth my time, and all praised The Squirrel Machine: 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Disturbing is not even the wordBy I. SchaefferA look into madness.If serials killers and animal mutilation creeps you out, don't read this. I wouldn't be surprised is someone vomited once after reading this. It was more disturbing than I thought it would be but the art is very interesting. It's definitely unique and is extremely dark and twisted.The mother is an interesting character, though you know little about here besides her husband is long dead. The overall point of this comic? I really think it's creepy for the sake of being creepy. The boys are obsessed with their horrid devices and everything else is meaningless. They're really weird and how the younger brother becomes a bedridden bloated mass I will never know.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Amazing and shocking at the same timeBy M. T. CrenshawWhat What What?! WTF!The Squirrel Machine is a BW graphic novel set in 19th century New England, structured in four parts, through which we see the Torpor Brothers go from teens to old people in a non-linear narrative.This novel has everything I want in a graphic book to be memorable: good graphics, great dose of imagination, uniqueness in style and story, they tease my emotions and/or my intellect, and the story keeps me thinking well after I finish the book.
    [Show full text]
  • Abandoned Cars
    ABANDONED CARS by Tim Lane APRIL $18.99 Paperback • Territory: E COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS / Literary • CQ: 30 168 pages, black-and-white, 7” x 9 ½” ISBN: 978-1-60699-341-5 Previous hardcover edition: 978-1-56097-918-0 • 2009 Ignatz Award Nominee for Outstanding Collection • Video preview of 2008 hardcover edition available at: fantagraphics.com/abandonedcars • AGE RANGE: 15 + • Author website: jackienoname.com THE ACCLAIMED 2008 debuT NOW IN SOFTCOVER! Abandoned Cars is Tim Lane’s first collection of graphic short stories, noir- ish narratives that are united by their exploration of the great American mytho- logical drama by way of the desperate and haunted characters that populate its pages. Lane’s characters exist on the margins of society—alienated, floating in the void between hope and despair, confused but introspective. The writing is straightforward, the stories mainstream but told in a pulpy idiom with an existential edge, often in the first person, reminiscent of David Goodis’s or Jim Thompson’s prose, or of films like Pick-Up on South Street or Out of the Past. Visually, Lane’s drawing is in a realistic mode, reminiscent of Charles Burns, that heightens the tension in stories that veer between naturalism on the one hand and the comical, nightmarish, and hallucinatory on the other. Here, American culture is a thrift store and the characters are thrift store junkies living among the clutter. It’s an America depicted as a subdued and haunted Coney Island, made up of lost characters—boozing, brawling, haplessly shooting themselves in the face, and hopping freight trains in search of Elvis.
    [Show full text]
  • N4u7k (Mobile Pdf) Pim Francie: the Golden Bear Days Online
    N4U7k (Mobile pdf) Pim Francie: The Golden Bear Days Online [N4U7k.ebook] Pim Francie: The Golden Bear Days Pdf Free Al Columbia *Download PDF | ePub | DOC | audiobook | ebooks Download Now Free Download Here Download eBook #1209322 in eBooks 2017-01-25 2017-01-25File Name: B01IQD97CO | File size: 33.Mb Al Columbia : Pim Francie: The Golden Bear Days before purchasing it in order to gage whether or not it would be worth my time, and all praised Pim Francie: The Golden Bear Days: 5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. So Much PotentialBy David SwanAl Columbia is one of the most enigmatic cartoonists alive and this collection will only add to his mystery. This book contains no story, only ideas and sketches pulled together and presented with some attempt to produce a very loose narrative. Collected here are the raw and disturbing images from the mind of an artist with seemingly no boundaries. If you've ever read anything by Columbia you'll know that he really doesn't do any self censorship and if anything this book is tamer than much of what he has produced. Columbia is generally characterized as such a perfectionist that his productivity is almost non- existent. This book would definitely back up that theory since many of these drawings are absolutely stunning and would only need some slight cleanup to be presented to the public in an actual story. As someone with a small bit of background in graphic design it saddens me to see pictures that clearly took many hours to create torn and taped back together.If the book did have a theme you might say it's the loss of innocence.
    [Show full text]
  • Books and Comics Issue
    CHICAGO’SFREEWEEKLYSINCE | MAY | MAY CHICAGO’SFREEWEEKLYSINCE Books and Comics Issue A brief history of ramen 10 | Four Slices of CAKE Mark Peters 12 | The city’s changing literary landscape Max Grinnell 18 | gentrification gets graphic Tyra Nicole Triche 16 | Self-publishing saved my life Mike Centeno 14 | Chicago’s summer reading 17 THIS WEEK CHICAGOREADER | MAY | VOLUME NUMBER IN THIS ISSUE T R - ­ ­ 22 PlaysofnoteForServices @ Renderedexploresthetrauma ofWorldWarIJackalopeonce againturnsstrawintogoldinLife PTB onPaperandmostofHenryVIII’s IEC SKKH wivesarebackaspopdivasinSix DEKS C LSK D P JR CEAL 31 ShowsofnoteDamonLocks M EP M BOOKS&COMICS BlackMonumentEnsembleWu A EJL 10 FoodAnexcerptfromthecomic TangClanJuiceWrldandmore SWDI CITYLIFE BJ MS 04 PublicService cookbookLet’sMakeRamen! thisweek SWMD L G AnnouncementReadingoutof 12 FestivalHerearesomeofthe 36 EarlyWarningsCherubs EA SN L thefreebookbox peopleyou’llmeetatCAKEthe LadytronMatingRitualandmore G D D C S MEBW 04 FeralCitizenBeecolumnsee annualalternativecomicsexpo justannouncedconcerts M L C whatallthebuzzisabout 14 ComicHowselfpublishingsaved 36 GossipWolfHomeroom’s S C -J oneillustrator’slife PhysicsforListenersseries FL CPF TA ECS 16 GraphicAnAfrofuturisticgraphic FILM connectslocaltrioZRLwithfour CN B novelcaptureshowwhiteprivilege 23 ReviewTransitfollowsrefugees disparatecomposersthePlastic D C LCI feedsonBlackneighborhoods inMarseillehopingforabetterlife CrimewaveOnoBandreleasesits G AG KT HR H JH 17 NosinessWeaskedyouwhose Butisitor? fourthtapeonlysplitandmore
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia Chronicle College Publications
    Columbia College Chicago Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago Columbia Chronicle College Publications 11-2-1987 Columbia Chronicle (11/02/1987) Columbia College Chicago Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle Part of the Journalism Studies Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation Columbia College Chicago, "Columbia Chronicle (11/2/1987)" (November 2, 1987). Columbia Chronicle, College Publications, College Archives & Special Collections, Columbia College Chicago. http://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle/231 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the College Publications at Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. It has been accepted for inclusion in Columbia Chronicle by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Columbia College Chicago. ·Futures hazy after market crash Stock anxiety Student loans hits colleg~s . · not affected yet By Mike O'Keeffe btlhon. executtve vtce chancellor for as- By Penny Mateck President Reagan have seen a hike in re­ • set management Michael Patrick said. lated loan fcc:... (CPS) - Colleges aren t sure what But because colleges play the stock The recent plunge of the Dow Jones the stock market crash of Oct. 1~ - or market carefully and conservatively. industrial avcmgc will have little or no An origination fee. a nat fcc every student must pay when taking out a the wild up and down swings that are said Jack Cox of the National Associa- effect on Guamntccd Students Loans loan. has risen from five percent to 5.5 likely to follow it - will mean to their tion of College and University Business (GSL's) students arc currently receiv­ percent.
    [Show full text]
  • Magazines V17N9.Qxd
    June COF C1:COF C1.qxd 5/14/2009 3:35 PM Page 1 A hero crosses the line in Christos Gage’s subversive new series! JUN 2009 DUE DATE: JUNE 13, 2009 NNamame COF FI Page June:COF FI Page December.qxd 5/14/2009 3:37 PM Page 1 featuredfeatured itemsitems PREMIER (GEMS) APPAREL G Grandville HC G Dark Horse Comics Spider-Man: Amazing Flex Black T-Shirt The Umbrella Academy: Dallas TP G Dark Horse Mad Engine G Comics Batman: The Killing Joke T-Shirt Graphitti Designs G Adventure Comics #1 DC Comics TOYS & MODELS Peter & Max: A Fables Novel HC G DC Comics/Vertigo Tyrese Gibson’s Mayhem #1 G Image Comics G The Darkness/Pitt #1 G Image Comics/Top Cow DC Heroes Wave 9 Action Figures DC Heroes G Productions Mega Bloks Halo Wars Sets Video Games G Ultimate Comics: Avengers #1 G Marvel Comics Gargoyles: Goliath Statue Animation G Wizard Magazine #215 G Wizard Entertainment Stargate SG-1: Season 1 Teal’c Animated Maquette Stargate COMICS DESIGNER TOYS Archie #600 G Archie Comics G Absolution #1 G Avatar Press Angry Youth Comix Action Figures Designer Toys G Gundam-00 Volume 1 GN G Bandai Entertainment King Ken Mini-Figures Designer Toys G Die Hard: Year One #1 G BOOM! Studios Uppy Uglydoll Designer Toys Project Superpowers: Meet the Bad Guys #1 G IMPORT TOYS & MODELS D.E./Dynamite Entertainment G Garth Ennis’ Battlefields HC G D.E./Dynamite Fantasy Figure Gallery: Monica’s Axe Statue Fantasy Entertainment Soul of Chogokin GX-04S: UFO Robo Grendizer Action G Usagi Yojimbo Special Edition HC G Fantagraphics Figure Super Robots Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon
    [Show full text]
  • Fantagraphics Fall 2020
    Up yours! Joy! Joy to you! Joy! Joy to you! orld’sG re isher of the W atest Cartoo Publ nists Since 1976 “It’s hard to overstate the revolutionary transformation Fantagraphics “Fantagraphics publishes the best comics in the world.” — Wired has helped bring to comics over its four decades.” — NPR “Fantagraphics is at the forefront of publishing the most well-sought “Since the mid-1970s, Fantagraphics has published a large and varied after, critically acclaimed, and creatively inspiring work in the field.” line, with new works and classic reprints, and has fought to establish — Complex comic books as a form of high art.” — The New York Times “One of the foremost publishers of comics, graphic novels and related “Fantagraphics has consistently published America’s most important works in the world.” — Publishers Weekly comics artists.” — TIME For over 40 years, Fantagraphics has published the very best comics and graphic novels that the medium has to offer. Our mission is to celebrate great cartooning in all of its incarnations, from the form’s early luminaries to contemporary artists currently forging the future of visual storytelling. Not content to rest on our laurels and extensive roster of talented artists, we constantly seek out fresh voices from across the globe. Thus, we honor the rich history of comics while providing a platform for bold new stories, styles, and perspectives that push the boundaries of the medium. Fantagraphics remains peerless in our commitment to be the publisher of the world’s greatest cartoonists. Find out more about Fantagraphics books, cartoonists, and upcoming events on website fantagraphics.com, our blog fantagraphics.com/flog, and on social media @fantagraphics.
    [Show full text]