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Chicago: Catholic New World: Biweekly Catolico: Monthly 1985 Joliet: Christ is Our Hope: Monthly 2008 Peoria: The Catholic Post: Weekly 1934 Rockford: The Observer: Weekly 1935 El Observador www.ElObservador.info Springfield: Catholic Times: Indiana: Evansville: The Message: Weekly 1970 Fort Wayne–South Bend: Today's Catholic News: Weekly ...
Chicago Public Library Omnibus Project of the Works Progress Administration of Illinois. 1942 – via Newberry Library. (English translations of selected Spanish-language newspaper articles, 1855–1938).
Chicago Morning News, 1881 (became Chicago Record) Chicago Morning Herald, 1893–1901 (became Record-Herald) Chicago Post, 1890–1929 (absorbed by Daily News) Chicago Record, 1881–1901; Chicago Record Herald, 1901–1914; Chicago Republican, 1865–1872 (became Chicago Inter Ocean) Chicago Sun, 1941–1948 (merged with Chicago Daily Times ...
The Union Signal (1883-2016) - Chicago, Evanston; The Voice of the Black Community (The Voice, pub.; 1968−1993) – Decatur [61] Weekly Thursday News (Michael Lakin, pub.; 1997−1997) – Mt. Pulaski [62] Weekly News (Michael Lakin, pub.; 1989−1997) – Mt. Pulaski [63] Mount Pulaski Weekly News (Weekly News, pub.; 1988−1988) – Mt ...
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El Observador (EO) is a weekly bilingual (English and Spanish) print and online newspaper, which has been in business since 1980. El Observador was the first Bilingual weekly newspaper publication in the San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland Metropolitan Area. Its headquarters are located in San Jose, although it is originally published in San Francisco.
In 1912 the Web Pressmen's Union No. 7 contract with the Hearst papers expired, and they requested a wage increase. Hearst Management and the union could not come to an agreement, so they entered arbitration with the Chicago Board of Trade's president Harry Wheeler, which resulted in a reduction of wages by 20-30%, in order to be more congruent with the prevailing wages of other Chicago ...
In 2005, Hollinger merged the 80-year-old Lerner Newspapers chain into Pioneer Press, Pioneer's first real inroads into the city of Chicago. Despite announcements by Publisher Larry Green that Pioneer intended to "grow" the Lerner Papers, over the course of the next six months, Pioneer dumped the venerable Lerner name, shut down most of its editions and laid off most of its employees.