Outlet Index

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Outlet Index Outlet Index 600 Words 207 Bloomingdale Press 117, 137 7 Days 217 Bolingbrook Reporter/Metropolitan 117, 140, 146 ABA Journal 185 Bolingbrook Sun 146 ABC Radio 31 Bridgeport News 226 ABC-TV 2, 16 Bridgeview Independent 151 ABS-CBN International 197 Brighton Park/McKinley Park Life 226 Addison Press 117, 136 Brookfield / Lyons Suburban Life 137 Adolescents & Medicine 185 Buffalo Grove Countryside 119, 128 African-Spectrum 189 Buffalo Grove Journal & Topics 128 Afrique 189 Bugle 126 Afro-Netizen 113, 189 Burbank-Stickney Independent 151 Al-Offok Al-Arabi 215 Bureau County Journal 121, 176 Alfa American Weekly Illustrated 203 Bureau County Republican 121, 176 Algonquin Countryside 118, 128 Business Journal 101 Alsip Express 151 Business Ledger 101 Alton Telegraph 153 Business Week 182 American Medical News 182 BusinessPOV 113 Antioch Journal 122, 123 Cable News Network - CNN 2 Antioch Review 118, 123 Cachet Magazine 190 Arabian Horizon Newspaper 215 Café Magazine 101 Arabstreet 113, 215 CAN TV 1, 7 Arlington Heights Journal & Topics 128 Capital Times 153 Arlington Heights Post 119, 128 Capitol Fax Sec 1:34, 109 Associated Press 108 Carol Stream Examiner 137 At the Movies 2 Carol Stream Press 117, 137 Aurora Beacon News 91 Cary-Grove Countryside 118, 129 Austin Voice 189, 224 Catalyst Chicago 101 Austin Weekly News 224 Catholic New World 101 Barrington Courier-Review 118, 128 Catholic News Service 109 Bartlett Examiner 136 CBS-TV 2, 8 Bartlett Press 117, 136 Champaign News Gazette 154 Batavia Republican 117, 136 Charleston Times-Courier 110, 155 Batavia Sun 136 Chesterton Tribune 155 Beachwood Reporter Sec 1:5, 113 Chi-Town Daily News 113 Bean Soup Times 189 Chicago Artists' News 102 Beepcentral 113 Chicago Athlete Magazine 102 Belleville News-Democrat 153 Chicago Católico 207 Bensenville Press 117, 136 Chicago Chinese News 195 Beverly News 226 Chicago Citizen Newspaper Group 97 Beverly Review 226 Chicago Communicator Newspaper 190, 224 Black Enterprise Magazine 185, 189 Chicago Crusader 190, 228 Bloomberg Business News 108 Chicago Daily Law Bulletin Sec 1:51, 91 Bloomberg Television 2 Chicago Defender 97, 110, 190 Getting On The Air, Online & Into Print • Ver. 18 © 2008 Community Media Workshop www.newstips.org • 233 • 312-369-6400 Outlet Index Chicago Deportivo 207 Conscious Choice 104 Chicago Flame 229 Copyline 191 Chicago Free Press 218 Countryside Suburban Life 137 Chicago Gazette 191 Crain's Chicago Business Sec 1:5, 98 Chicago Independent Media Center 109, 113 Creating Community Connections 114 Chicago Inquirer 191 Crete Record 151 Chicago Jewish News 216 Czech-American TV 201 Chicago Jewish Star 216 Czechoslovak Daily Herald - Denni Hlasatel 201 Chicago Journal Sec 1:35, 97, 224 Daily Chronicle 121, 155 Chicago Life Magazine 102 Daily Eastern News 229 Chicago Magazine Sec 1:5, 102 Daily Egyptian 229 Chicago Maroon 229 Daily Gazette 122, 156 Chicago Parent 292 Daily Herald Sec 1:5, Sec 1:51, Sec 1:53, 86 Chicago Reader Sec 1:5, 97 Daily Illini 230 Chicago Reporter 103 Daily Journal 156 Chicago Review 214, 217 Daily Northwestern 230 Chicago Ridge Citizen 151 Danish Pioneer/ Den Danske Pioneer 201 Chicago Shimpo 198 Darien Suburban Life 117, 146 Chicago Shoreline Magazine 103 Decatur Herald & Review Sec 1:51, 110, 157 Chicago Social 103 Deerfield Review 118, 123 Chicago South Shore Scene 191, 228 DePaulia 230 Chicago Standard News 152, 191, 194, 226 Des Moines Register 157 Chicago Sun-Times Sec 1:51, Sec 1:53, 80 Des Plaines Journal & Topics 129 Chicago Tribune Sec 1:4, Sec 1:34, Sec 1:51, 1:53, 68 Des Plaines Times 119, 129 Chicago Union Teacher 103 Des Plaines Valley News 138 Chicago Weekly 229 Des Plaines/Park Ridge Bugle 129 Chicago Wilderness Magazine 104 Desi Talk 197 Chicago’s NW Side Press 222 Detroit Free Press 158 Chicagoland Minority Journal 214 Detroit News 159 Chicagoland Television "CLTV" 1, 7 Dispatch 160 China Journal 195 Dixon Telegraph 122, 160 China Star Weekly "Chen Bao" 195 Doings Newspapers 138 Chinese American News 195 Downers Grove Reporter 117, 146 Chocolate City 114, 191 Downers Grove Sun 146 Christian Century 182 East St. Louis Monitor 178 Christian Science Monitor 180 Ebony Magazine 185, 192 Cicero / Berwyn Life 137 Economist 182 Cikagos Aidas 202 Edgebrook-Sauganash Times Review 119, 222 Clarendon Hills Suburban Life 117, 146 Edison-Norwood Times Review 119, 222 Clear Ridge Reporter 227 Eintracht 201 CNBC 3 El Conquistador 94, 121, 207 Columbia Chronicle 229 El Día 207 Comcast SportsNet Chicago 3 El Imparcial 207 Getting On The Air, Online & Into Print • Ver. 18 © 2008 Community Media Workshop www.newstips.org • 234 • 312-369-6400 Outlet Index El Sol De Chicago Newspaper 208 Glen Ellyn News 117, 139 Elburn Herald 138 Glen Ellyn Sun 139 Elgin Courier News 91 Glencoe News 118, 124 Elk Grove Journal 129 Glenview Announcements 118, 124 Elk Grove Times 119, 129 Glos Nauczyciela 203 Elm Leaves 119, 138 Glos Polek 203 Elmhurst Press 117, 138 Golf Mill Journal 130 Epoch Times 195 Governing Magazine 186 Espejo 208 Grayslake Journal 124 Esquire 185 Grayslake Review 118, 124 Ethnic Radio Partners 214 Greek Star 201 Evanston Review 118, 123 Gurnee Press 130 Evanston Round Table 123 Gurnee Review 118, 124 Evanston Sentinel 123 Hanover Park Examiner 140 Evergreen Park Courier 151 Harbor Country News 178 Expatpol 203 Harlem/Irving Times 222 Express 203 Harpo Radio 31 Extapol 114, 203 Hataw Pinoy 197 Extra Publications 208 Hickory Hills Citizen 152 F Newsmagazine 203 Highland Park News 118, 124 Feeley News Bureau 109 Hinsdalean Sec 1:5, 140 Filipino-American Community Builder 196 Hispanicpro 114, 208 Final Call Newspaper 192 Hlas Národa / The Voice of the Nation 201 Financial News Bureau 109 Hoffman Estates Review 119, 130 Financial Times 108 Hola America Newspaper 208 Forbes Magazine 185 Homer Lockport Lemont Sun 147 Forest Leaves 119, 138 Hoy 92, 208 Forest Park Review 139 Huffington Post Sec 1:5, 113, 114 Fox Lake Press 130 Huntley Farmside 117, 130 Fox Network News 3, 11 Hyde Park Herald 228 Fox News Radio 31 IDENTITY 115, 218 Fra Noi 202 Illinois Banker Magazine 176 Franklin Park Herald Journal 119, 139 Illinois Entertainer 104 Free Press Newspapers 147 Illinois Issues Sec 1:51, 176 Freeport Journal-Standard 160 Illinois Public Radio 31 Frost Illustrated 192 Illinois Radio Network 31 Galena Gazette 178 Illinois School News Service 110 Gapers Block Sec 1:24, Sec1:34, 114 Illinois Times Sec 1:5, 176 Gary Crusader 178 Immigration Here & There 115 Gatehouse News Service Sec 1:51, 109 In These Times 182 Gay Chicago Magazine 218 Independent 230 Geneva Republican 117, 139 India Abroad 197 Geneva Sun 139 India Bulletin 198 Getting On The Air, Online & Into Print • Ver. 18 © 2008 Community Media Workshop www.newstips.org • 235 • 312-369-6400 Outlet Index India Post Chicago 198 Lake Zurich Courier 118, 131 India Tribune 198 Lakefront Outlook 228 Indian Reporter and World News 198 Langas 202 Indianapolis Star 161 LaSalle News Tribune 164 Info Tiltas 202 Lawndale News 209, 224 Ink Newspaper 192 Lazo Cultural 209 Inside Publications 221 Learning Guide Network 110 Investor's Business Daily 180 Lee Enterprises Sec 1:51, 110 Irish American News 202 Lemont Reporter / Metropolitan 140 Irish American Post 202 Liberty Suburban Chicago Newspapers 117 Itasca Press 117, 140 Libertyville News 131 JBTV 4 Libertyville Review 118, 125 Jefferson Park/Portage Park Cragin Times 119, 222 Lincoln-Way Sun 147 Jerry Springer Show 4 Lincolnshire Review 118, 125 Jet Magazine 183, 192 Lincolnwood Review 119, 125 Jewish Chicago 216 Lindenhurst News 125 Joliet Herald News 92 Lisle Reporter 147 Journal Gazette 164 Lisle Sun 141 Journal News 227 Lombard Spectator 117, 141 Journal Times 163 Lombardian 141 Journal (UIS) 230 Los Angeles Times 180 JUF News 216 Loyola Phoenix 231 Kane County Chronicle 92, 121 Lumpen Magazine 104 Kenosha News 163 Magazyn Plus 204 Kerala Express 198 Malcolm X-Press 192, 231 Korea Central Daily News 199 Market Watch 115 Korea Times of Chicago 199 May Report 115 KoreAm Journal 199 Maywood Herald 119, 141 Korean Christian Journal 200 Medill News Service 110 Korean News 200 Melrose Park Herald 119, 141 Kurier Codzienny 203 Metro Senior 220 Kurtis Productions 4 Michigan Avenue Magazine 104 La Grange Park Suburban Life 140 Midlothian-Bremen Messenger 152 La Grange Suburban Life 140 Midweek Journal 122, 164 La Nueva Semana 209 Midwest Business 115 La Prensa de Chicago Newspaper 209 Midwest Living Magazine 186 La Raza 99, 209 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 165 Lake County Journal 121, 163 Minneapolis Star Tribune 166 Lake Forester 119, 125 Monthly Aspectarian 104 Lake in the Hills Countryside 119, 130 Moody Student 231 Lake Magazine 177 Morris Daily Herald 121, 167 Lake Villa / Lindenhurst Review 125 Morton Grove Champion 119, 126 Lake Villa Record 131 Mother Jones Magazine 186 Getting On The Air, Online & Into Print • Ver. 18 © 2008 Community Media Workshop www.newstips.org • 236 • 312-369-6400 Outlet Index Mount Prospect Journal 131 Oak Lawn Independent 147 Mount Prospect Times 119, 131 Oak Leaves 119, 142 Ms. Magazine 186 Oakbrook Terrace Press 142 Mt. Greenwood Express 227 Onion 183 Mundelein Review 118, 126 Oprah Winfrey Show 5 Muslim Journal 215 Orland Township Messenger 148 Muslim Observer 215 Our Village News 222 N’DIGO 99, 193 Palatine Countryside 119, 132 Naperville Reporter 117, 147 Palatine Journal & Topics 132 Naperville Sun 93 Palos Citizen 148 Narod Polski 204 Palos Heights Reporter 148 Nation 183 Pantagraph 168 National Journal 183 Park Ridge Herald Advocate 119, 132 National Public Radio 32 Park Ridge Journal
Recommended publications
  • LEE ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED (Exact Name of Registrant As Specified in Its Charter) Delaware 42-0823980 (State of Incorporation) (I.R.S
    Table of Contents UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 FORM 10-K [X] ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For The Fiscal Year Ended September 29, 2019 OR [ ] TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 Commission File Number 1-6227 LEE ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED (Exact name of Registrant as specified in its Charter) Delaware 42-0823980 (State of incorporation) (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 4600 E 53rd Street, Davenport, Iowa 52807 (Address of principal executive offices) (563) 383-2100 Registrant's telephone number, including area code Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Title of Each Class Trading Symbol(s) Name of Each Exchange On Which Registered Common Stock - $0.01 par value LEE New York Stock Exchange Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes [ ] No [X] Indicate by check mark if the Registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes [ ] No [X] Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the Registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes [X] No [ ] Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this Chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or such shorter period that the Registrant was required to submit).
    [Show full text]
  • Case 1:99-Cv-02496-GK Document 6095 Filed 06/02/14 Page 1 of 27
    Case 1:99-cv-02496-GK Document 6095 Filed 06/02/14 Page 1 of 27 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Civil Action No. 99-CV -2496 (GK) ) Next scheduled court appearance: and ) NONE ) TOBACCO-FREE KIDS ) ACTION FUND, et al. ) ) Plaintiff-Intervenors ) ) V. ) ) PHILIP MORRIS USA INC., et al., ) ) Defendants. ) I -Remand CONSENT ORDER IMPLEMENTING THE CORRECTIVE STATEMENTS REMEDY UNDER ORDER #1015 AND ORDER #34-REMAND Upon consideration of the Joint Motion for Consent Order Implementing the Corrective Statements Remedy under Order #1015 and Order #34-Remand (Dkt. No. 6021; filed 1/10/2014), and the entire record herei'n, it is hereby ORDERED that: The corrective statements remedy under Order #1015 (DN 5733, Aug. 17, 2006), published as United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc., 449 F. Supp. 2d 1, 938-41 (D.D.C. 2006), aff'd in part & vacated in part, 566 F.3d 1095 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (per curiam), cert. denied, 561 U.S._, 130 S. Ct. 3501 (2010), is hereby MODIFIED as set forth below: 1 Case 1:99-cv-02496-GK Document 6095 Filed 06/02/14 Page 2 of 27 I. Definitions A. "Above the Fold" means: 1. For websites other than mobile websites, the text that begins on the first screen of the home page for the web address, without scrolling, or 2. For mobile websites that do not use responsive design, the text that begins on the first screen in portrait orientation, without scrolling. B. "Benchmark timeslot" for a particular month means the timeslot that received the fewest average impressions (18-99+) among CBS, ABC, and NBC, Monday through Thursday, between 7:00p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • 2003 NJPA Better Newspaper Contest Results
    2003 Editorial Daily NJPA Better Newspaper Contest Results Overall Awards Journalist of the Year, Daily “Profiting From Public Service” Paul D'Ambrosio Asbury Park Press, Neptune Judges comments: A clear winner. A powerful expose. It is evident that a ton of tedious work went into this massive project. A provocative, infuriating look at greed and self-aggrandizement in NJ’s political underworld. Would have seen boxes splattered throughout the pages separately addressing how each different “sin” gave the politician and his family/business quality of life advantages the voter who put him in office doesn’t have, but is paying for, etc. i.e. several jobs adding up to bigger pensions and a cushy upcoming retirement. I’d title the boxes, “How does this make you feel?” Would like to have seen a chart of how all politicians cited in the series for their misdeeds made out in the election: did they win or lose? By how many votes? One was cited (Bennett’s race). Great job! Overall Awards General Excellence, Daily, under 60,000 Herald News, West Paterson Overall Awards General Excellence, Daily, over 60,000 The Record (Bergen County, N.J.) D-01 Responsible Journalism Public Service, Lloyd P. Burns Memorial Award Daily, under 60,000 First Place “In the Line of Fire” Staff Burlington County Times, Willingboro Second Place “AIDS Series” Martin Espinoza The Jersey Journal, Jersey City Third Place No winner Judges comments: First Place – Classic newspaper work – shedding light on an issue and creating awareness of a problem. This newspaper is comprehensive, enlightening and urgent in its coverage of two important issues that affect its community.
    [Show full text]
  • Berbaum Clarance Absract
    Title Page & Abstract An Interview with Clarence Berbaum Part of the Illinois Public Media (WILL radio.tv.online) Central Illinois World War II Stories project Interview # VR2-V-D-2007-042 Clarence Berbaum, a radio repairman for the United States Army during World War II, was interviewed on the date listed below as part of the Illinois Public Media – WILL AM-FM-TV Central Illinois World War II Stories project. Interview dates & location: Date: 15 September 2007 Location: Illinois Public Media, Urbana, IL Interview Format: Digital video Interviewer: Jesse Phillippe, Illinois Public Media affiliate Technical Support (cameraman, etc): Henry Radcliffe, Videographer, Illinois Public Media (WILL radio.tv.online) Transcription by: __________________________ Transcript being processed Edited by: _______________________________ Total Pages: ______ Total Time: 53 min/ 0.88 hrs Accessioned into the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Archives on December 4, 2014. The interview is archived at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield, Illinois. © 2007 Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library Abstract Clarence Berbaum, Veterans Remember, VR2-V-D-2007-042 Biographical Information Overview of Interview: Clarence Berbaum was born on November 5, 1919 in Champaign, Illinois. He graduated from Champaign High School in 1938. He was drafted on February 11, 1942 when he was twenty-two years old. On the night he left his family for the war, he told his father that he did not think that he would be returning. After Berbaum was inducted at Camp Grant, Illinois, his groups of inductees were sent to Fort Knox, Kentucky to learn basic armored training. Next, Berbaum was sent to Pine Camp, New York, where he was assigned to the 4th Armored Division, responsible for driving a tank.
    [Show full text]
  • ED443120.Pdf
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 443 120 CS 216 938 AUTHOR Schultz, Lucille M. TITLE The Young Composers: Composition's Beginnings in Nineteenth-Century Schools. Studies in Writing and Rhetoric. INSTITUTION Conference on Coll. Composition and Communication, Urbana, IL. ISBN ISBN-0-8093-2236-6 PUB DATE 1999-00-00 NOTE 231p. AVAILABLE FROM Southern Illinois University Press, P.O. Box 3697, Carbondale, IL 62902-3697 ($14.95). Web site: www.siu.edu/-siupress. PUB TYPE Books (010) Historical Materials (060) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC10 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Cultural Context; *Educational History; Elementary Secondary Education; Higher Education; *Rhetoric; Student Centered Curriculum; *Writing Instruction; Writing Strategies IDENTIFIERS *Nineteenth Century; Nineteenth Century Rhetoric; Pestalozzi (Johann Heinrich) ABSTRACT This book, the first full-length history of school-based writing instruction, demonstrates that writing instruction in 19th-century American schools was more important than has previously been assumed in the overall history of writing instruction. Drawing on primary materials that have not been considered in previous histories of writing instruction (little-known textbooks and student writing that includes prize-winning essays, journal entries, letters, and articles written for school newspapers), the book shows that in 19th-century American schools the voices of the British rhetoricians that dominated college writing instruction were attenuated by the voice of the Swiss education reformer Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi. It was partly through the influence of Pestalozzi's thought that writing instruction for children in schools became child-centered, not just a replica or imitation of writing instruction in the colleges. These 19th-century schools prefigured some contemporary composition practices: free writing, peer editing, and the use of illustrations as writing prompts.
    [Show full text]
  • Resolution 5-18-21 Approving Wicklund
    KENOSHA COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS RESOLUTION NO Subject: Resolution to Approve the Appointment of Peter Wicklund to Serve as a Member of the Local Emergency Planning Committee (Group 3) Orieind X Corrected EI 2nd Correction E Resubmitted tr Date Submitted: Mav 18.2021 Date Resubmitted: Submitted By: Judiciary & Law Committee Fiscal Note Attached tr Legal Note Attachcd tr Prepared By: Lt. Horace J. Staples, rrasc: Signature: Director of Emergency Management WHEREAS, under County Executive Appointment #2021122-6, the County Executive has appointed Peter Wicklund to serve as a three-year term as a member of the Local Emergency Planning Committee (Group 3), and; WHEREAS, the Judiciary & Law Committee has reviewed the County Executive's request for review and approval of his appointment of the above named to serve on this Committee and is recommending to the County Board the approval of this appointment, and; BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Kenosha County Board of Supervisors approves the appointment of Peter Wicklund to serve as a member of the Local Emergency Planning Committee (Group 3) immediately upon confirmation of the County Board and to continue until the l't day of May 2024 or until a successor is appointed by the County Executive and confirmed by the Kenosha County Board of Supervisors. Respectfully submitted, Judiciary & Law Committee Are No Abstain I Boyd Frederick, Chairperson tr David Celebre, Vice-Chairperson Jeff Wamboldt T Laura Belsky Mark Nordigian Sharon Pomaville I Jerry Gulley CoUNTY oF KuxoSHA Oprrcn oF THE Couxry Exs,cuuvn 1010 - 56th Street, Third Floor Jim Kreuser, County Executive Kenosha, Wisconsin 53 140 (262) 6s3-2600 Fax: (262) 653-2817 ADMINISTRATIVE PROPOSAL COUNTY EXECUTIVE APPOINTMENT 2021122-6 RE: KENOSHA COUNTY LOCAL EMERGENCY PLANNING COMMITTEE TO THE HONORABLE KENOSHA CO1INTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS: Placing special trust in his judgment and based upon his qualifications, I hereby submit to the honorable Kenosha County Board of Supervisors for its review and approval the name of Peter J.
    [Show full text]
  • Loyalty, Or Democracyat Home?
    WW II: loyalty, or democracy at home? continued from page 8 claimed 275,000 copies sold each week, The "old days," when Abbott 200,000 of its National edition, 75,000 became the first black publisher to of its local edition. Mrs. Robert L. Vann establish national circulation by who said she'd rather be known as soliciting Pullman car porters and din- Robert L. Vann's widow than any other ing car waiters to get his paper out, man's wife reported that the 17 were gone. Once, people had been so various editions of the Pittsburgh V a of anxious about getting the Defender that lW5 Yt POWBCX I IT A CMCK WA KIMo) Courier had circulation 300,000. Pf.Sl5 Jm happened out ACtw mE Other women leaders of they just sent Abbott money in the mail iVl n HtZx&Vif7JWaP rjr prominent the NNPA were Miss Olive . .coins glued to cards with table numerous. syrup. Abbott just dumped all the Diggs was business manager of Anthony money and cards in a big barrel to Overton's Chicago Bee. She was elected separate the syrup and paper from the th& phone? I wbuWfi in 1942 as an executive committee cash. What Abbott sold his readers was w,S,75ods PFKvSi member, while Mrs. Vann was elected an idea catch the first train and come eastern vice president. They were the out of the South. first women to hold elected office in the n New publishers with new ideas were I NNPA. coming to the fore. W.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Margaret C. Rung Professor of History Director, History Program and Center for New Deal Studies Roosevelt University
    Margaret C. Rung Professor of History Director, History Program and Center for New Deal Studies Roosevelt University 430 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60605 (w) 312-341-3724, Rm 834 e-mail: [email protected] Education: Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins University (History) M.A., The Johns Hopkins University (History) B.A., Oberlin College (Phi Beta Kappa) Professional Positions: Professor of History, Roosevelt University Chair, Department of History and Philosophy, 2013-2017 Director of the Center for New Deal Studies, Roosevelt University 2002- Associate Dean, College of Arts & Sciences, Roosevelt University, 2001-2005 Program Coordinator, History, 1999-2000, 2001-2005 Visiting Fulbright Lecturer, University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia, 2000-2001 Assistant Professor of History, Mount Allison University, 1993-1994 Research/Professional Experience: Research & Editorial Assistant, The Dwight David Eisenhower Papers Project, Baltimore, Maryland, 1987-1993 Research Historian, History Associates, Inc., Rockville, Maryland, 1985-1990 *Significant projects: Rung, "Celebrating One Hundred Years: A History of Florida National Bank." Recipient of Golden Image Award, Florida Public Relations Association, April 1988. *Research assistance on: Richard G. Hewlett, Jessie Ball DuPont. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1992; Rodney P. Carlisle, Where the Fleet Begins: A History of the David Taylor Naval Research Center, 1898-1998. Washington, D.C.: Naval Historical Center, 1998; Dian O.Belanger, Managing American Wildlife: A History of the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies. Amherst: University of Massachusetts, 1988. Archival Assistant, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, D.C., 1985 Publications: With Erik Gellman, “The Great Depression” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of American History, ed. Jon Butler. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018.
    [Show full text]
  • Minority Percentages at Participating Newspapers
    Minority Percentages at Participating Newspapers Asian Native Asian Native Am. Black Hisp Am. Total Am. Black Hisp Am. Total ALABAMA The Anniston Star........................................................3.0 3.0 0.0 0.0 6.1 Free Lance, Hollister ...................................................0.0 0.0 12.5 0.0 12.5 The News-Courier, Athens...........................................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Lake County Record-Bee, Lakeport...............................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 The Birmingham News................................................0.7 16.7 0.7 0.0 18.1 The Lompoc Record..................................................20.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 The Decatur Daily........................................................0.0 8.6 0.0 0.0 8.6 Press-Telegram, Long Beach .......................................7.0 4.2 16.9 0.0 28.2 Dothan Eagle..............................................................0.0 4.3 0.0 0.0 4.3 Los Angeles Times......................................................8.5 3.4 6.4 0.2 18.6 Enterprise Ledger........................................................0.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 Madera Tribune...........................................................0.0 0.0 37.5 0.0 37.5 TimesDaily, Florence...................................................0.0 3.4 0.0 0.0 3.4 Appeal-Democrat, Marysville.......................................4.2 0.0 8.3 0.0 12.5 The Gadsden Times.....................................................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Merced Sun-Star.........................................................5.0
    [Show full text]
  • Smalley Schools
    KENOSHA NEWS SUNDAY, JULY 26, 2020 | A1 St. Joseph Catholic Academy Now Enrolling New Students Lancers return for in-person instruction on Wednesday, August 19, 2020. At St. Joseph Catholic Academy, a comprehensive preschool through senior high school, our values are the foundation of our academic and character-focused curriculum. We look forward to the opportunity to develop your child’s purpose and nurture his or her educational success. The SJCA staff is prepared and excited about the future, planning for another strong school year. To register your student, take a tour, or learn more about SJCA, please contact the Admissions department at [email protected] or (262) 654-8651 ext. 104. St. Joseph Catholic Academy • 2401 69th Street, Kenosha WI 53143 • (262) 654-8651 ext. 104 • www.sjcawi.org SUNDAY MOSTLY CLOUDY AND HUMID 93 • 72 FORECAST, B8 | SUNDAY, JULY 26, 2020 | kenoshanews.com | $4.00 New school year plans on KUSD’s agenda Tuesday KENOSHA NEWS STAFF How the start of the 2020-21 school year looks may be known by late Tuesday night. The Kenosha Unifi ed School District will hold its regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m., both in person with limited seating at the Educational Support Cen- ter’s Board Meeting Room, 3600 52nd St., and streaming live on the district’s YouTube channel. At the top of the to-do list for parents, students, teachers and sta alike is the plan to return to school in the midst of the ongo- ing COVID-19 pandemic. During a special board meet- ing earlier this month, a proposal that included either in-person classes or virtual learning for elementary and middle school students was laid out, along with a plan at the three district high Anthony Smalley schools.
    [Show full text]
  • Infographic Placements
    MEDIA OUTLET NAME CITY STATE READERSHIP Your Alaska Link Anchorage AK 8,989 Kodiak Daily Mirror Kodiak AK 6,484 Seward Journal Delta Junction AK 5,001 Delta Wind Delta Junction AK 1,200 Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Fairbanks AK 434,431 Gadsden Times Gadsden AL 71,778 Alex City Outlook Alexander City AL 50,933 Wetumpka Herald Wetumpka AL 37,608 Courier Journal Florence AL 24,563 Arab Tribune Arab AL 13,952 Elba Clipper Elba AL 10,969 Randolph Leader Roanoke AL 6,449 Cutoff News Bessemer AL 5,963 Montgomery Independent Montgomery AL 4,632 Tallassee Tribune Alexander City AL 4,500 Southeast Sun Enterprise AL 4,337 Tuskegee News Tuskegee AL 3,294 Moulton Advertiser Moulton AL 3,073 Opelika Observer Online Opelika AL 3,000 WHEP 1310 Foley AL 613 Times Daily's TN Valley Search Decatur AL 5,700 Times Daily's TN Valley Brides Decatur AL 5,968 Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Online Fayetteville AR 159,356 Log Cabin Democrat Conway AR 67,156 Courier News Russellville AR 47,028 River Valley Now Russellville AR 15,000 El Dorado News-Times Online El Dorado AR 8,601 ASU Herald State University AR 6,698 Saline Courier Benton AR 5,511 Waldron News Waldron AR 3,158 De Queen Bee De Queen AR 2,204 Newton County Times Jasper AR 1,665 Radio Works Camden AR 1,500 Madison County Record Huntsville AR 1,221 Bray Online Magnolia AR 1,000 Dewitt Era Enterprise Online Dewitt AR 1,000 Southern Progressive Online Horseshoe Bend AR 300 Harrison Daily Times Harrison AR 53,294 Ashley County Ledger Hamburg AR 8,974 Ashley News Observer Crossett AR 1,001 The Seward Journal
    [Show full text]
  • Undermining Black Enterprise with Land Use Rules
    CLOWNEY.DOC 7/10/2009 2:12 PM INVISIBLE BUSINESSMAN: UNDERMINING BLACK ENTERPRISE WITH LAND USE RULES Stephen Clowney* Rates of self-employment in African-American neighborhoods remain feeble. Although the reasons behind the failure of black busi- nesses are complex, zoning regulations play a largely unexamined role in constraining the development of African-American enterpris- es. Land use fees, municipal zoning board decisions, and the general insistence on separating residential from commercial uses all impress unique and disproportionate harms on African-American merchants, making it difficult to find affordable business space in suitable loca- tions. Moreover, current attempts to reorganize the land use system are inadequate to solve the problems facing black businesspeople. A complete rolling back of zoning laws is impractical and unnecessary, while attempts to promote street vending or home-based business run aground on the objections of local homeowners. Instead of pursuing these failed strategies, municipal governments should create programs that transfer abandoned buildings to fledgling merchants of the inner city. This new land use policy could spark a revival of urban entre- preneurship and help restore crumbling neighborhoods to their for- mer glory. Unlike other proposals to reform zoning laws, transfer- ring vacant government-owned land unites the interests of businesspeople, homeowners, and local governments. Inner-city merchants receive the space they need to foster new business ideas. Local homeowners rid themselves of the scourge of empty buildings. Finally, municipalities generate new revenue by returning unproduc- tive buildings to the tax rolls. INTRODUCTION At the start of the twenty-first century, land use reform is the most underexamined method of restoring the economic vitality of central ci- ∗ Assistant Professor of Law, University of Kentucky.
    [Show full text]