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The Reporter is an American weekly community newspaper based in the Chicago suburb of Palos Heights, Illinois, and serves the Illinois communities of Oak Lawn, Evergreen Park, Worth, Chicago Ridge, Palos Hills and Hickory Hills. It is a Thursday newspaper delivered to subscribers via mail, but hits newsstands Wednesday.
Suburban Life Media is a Downers Grove, Illinois-based publisher of 20 weekly newspapers in Chicago's western and northern suburbs. Formerly known as Suburban Life Publications , it was purchased from GateHouse Media and renamed by current owner Shaw Media in October 2012.
North Loop News; Northside News (1930s) Near North News; New Metro News; Norwood Review; Brookfield Enterprise / The Times (1932-1985) Residents' Journal; River North News; The Skeleton News; Times, 1950s–2005; Uptown Action, 1980-1985 [3] Westside Journal; West Town Chicago Journal; West Town Free Press (West Town Tenants Union) (1997-2002 ...
Naujienos (socialist newspaper) (Lithuanian Daily News) – Chicago Nedelni Hlasatel (formerly Denni Hlasatel ) – Berwyn Sonntagpost und Milwaukee deutsche Zeitung – Chicago
The Daily Reporter, Coldwater; The Daily Telegram, Adrian; Detroit Free Press; Gaylord Herald Times; The Graphic, Petoskey; Hillsdale Daily News; The Holland Sentinel; Ionia Sentinel-Standard; Lansing State Journal; The Livingston County Daily Press & Argus; The Monroe News; Observer and Eccentric Newspapers; Petoskey News-Review; The Sault ...
The Clinton Journal is a twice-weekly newspaper that caters to readers in the town of Clinton, Illinois and its surrounding areas. [1] Originally known as the Daily Public, the Journal has been the major newspaper in Clinton since the mid-19th century. Its offices are now located at 111 S. Monroe Street, right off the downtown square.
Cornelia Grumman, a 2003 Pulitzer Prize winning editorial writer at the Chicago Tribune for her death penalty editorials, was a reporter at the Southtown. Cathleen Falsani, author of The God Factor and now the religion reporter for the Sun-Times, got her start in newspapers as the religion beat writer for the Southtown.
Several other newspapers started in the Pekin area before the Daily Times, including the Tazewell Reporter (1839), the Pekin Weekly Visitor (1845), the Tazewell Whig (1848), Pekin Commercial Advertiser (1848), and the IIlinois Reveille (1850). [2] In the mid-1880s, the Pekin Bulletin and the Legal Tender (a greenback newspaper) were founded. [2]