TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary of the Collection
Administrative Information
History of Chicago Reader
Scope and Content of the Collection
Organization
Selected Search Terms
Other Finding Aids
Container List
Series 1: Manuscripts, 1972-1995
Series 2: Legal Files, 1982-1994
Series 3: Miscellaneous Materials,
1971-2000
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The Newberry Library Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special
Collections 60 West Walton Street Chicago, Illinois 60610-7324 USA Phone: 312-255-3506 Fax: 312-255-3646 E-Mail: specialcolls@newberry.org URL: http://www.newberry.org
Machine-readable finding aid encoded by
Lisa Janssen,
2009.
©2009.
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| Creator |
Chicago
Reader
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| Title |
Chicago Reader
Records
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| Dates |
1971-2000 |
| Extent |
33 linear feet (77
boxes, 1 oversize box)
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| Abstract |
Original copy of
articles, legal files, miscellaneous administrative files, and unsolicited
manuscripts of the Chicago Reader alternative
weekly newspaper.
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| Language |
Materials are in
English.
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| Repository |
Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department
of Special Collections
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| Collection Call Number |
Midwest MS Chicago Reader R |
| Collection Stack Location |
3a 23 1-3 |
Chicago Reader Records, The Newberry Library, Chicago.
Gift of the Chicago Reader, 1994.
Lisa Janssen and Alison Hinderliter, 2008-2009.
This inventory was created with the generous support of the National
Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or
recommendations expressed in this inventory do not necessarily represent those
of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access
The Chicago Reader Records are open for research in the Special
Collections Reading Room; 1 box at a time (Priority III).
Ownership and Literary Rights
The Chicago Reader Records are the physical property of the
Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs or
assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this
collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special
Collections.
Return to the Table of Contents
Alternative weekly newspaper founded in Chicago in 1971.
The Chicago Reader was founded in 1971 by
a group of friends who met at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. Unlike
the underground press of the 1960s, alternative weeklies like the
Reader were less political and more commercial in
their orientation, published by and for the baby boomers who were then emerging
from college.
The brainchild of Robert A. Roth, who grew up in the Chicago suburb of
Arlington Heights, the Reader ignored the news and
concentrated instead on the texture of life in the city: rather than add to the
plentiful coverage of politics, crime, and celebrities supplied by the city’s
four dailies, it offered features about everyday life and ordinary people. It
also offered extensive listings of arts and cultural events-- especially live
music, film, and theater--and prominently featured the writing of young
critics. The paper is often credited with nurturing Chicago’s nascent theater
scene, giving early coverage to storied companies such as the St. Nicholas,
Organic, and Steppenwolf.
The paper also distinguished itself by giving free classifieds to
individual readers and by distributing the paper for free, a practice that was
virtually unheard of at the time for publications with journalistic ambitions.
Eventually, free circulation lost its stigma and became the standard for city
weeklies.
The Reader is perhaps best known for its
deep, immersive style of literary journalism. An oft-cited example is a
19,000-word article on beekeeping by editor Michael Lenehan. Steve Bogira's
1988 article “A Fire in the Family” used an apartment-building fire as the
starting point for a 15,000-word chronicle of life among the underclass. And
Lee Sandlin’s two-part piece on World War II ranged close to 34,000 words. (A
13-minute version of it was aired on the This American Life program on National
Public Radio.)
As the paper prospered, investigative and political reporting became
another important part of the mix. Reader articles
by David Moberg are credited with helping to elect Chicago’s first black mayor,
the late Harold Washington. John Conroy wrote extensively over a period of more
than 17 years on police torture in Chicago; his reporting was instrumental in
the ouster and prosecution of the alleged leader of a police torture ring and
in the release of several wrongly convicted prisoners from death row. And in
more recent years, extensive coverage of tax increment financing (TIFs) by Ben
Joravsky and articles on government transparency by Joravsky and political
editor Mick Dumke have had a major impact on Chicagoans’ understanding of city
politics.
In 2006, one of the paper’s founders, Tom Rehwaldt, filed suit against
his partners, accusing them of mismanagement. Not long afterward, in July 2007,
the Reader was sold to Ben Eason and Creative
Loafing, Inc. In 2008, Creative Loafing filed for bankruptcy and was later
acquired by its chief creditor, Atalaya Capital Management.
Despite staff cutbacks necessitated by these ownership changes, and by
environmental factors leading to drops in advertising revenues, key figures
remained on staff in January 2010, including editor Alison True, managing
editor Kiki Yablon, media critic Michael Miner, film critic J.R. Jones, food
writer Mike Sula, arts reporter Deanna Isaacs, theater critic Albert Williams,
and music writers Peter Margasak and Miles Raymer. In June 2010 Creative
Loafing laid off Alison True. Managing editor Kiki Yablon was installed as
editor and Geoff Dougherty was brought in as associate publisher to assist new
publisher Alison Draper.
The Chicago Reader continues to be
acknowledged as a leader of the alternative press, among the top three or four
papers in the country in terms of page count, advertising revenue, and
reputation for editorial excellence. - Reader
staff
Return to the Table of Contents
Original copy of articles and some columns; legal files pertaining to
articles which involved litigation of some kind; miscellaneous administrative
materials, including files of editor Nancy Banks, letters to the editor, and
letters to the Straight Dope column; layout and paste-up spreads; and
unsolicited manuscripts.
Narrative descriptions of the subject matter, types of material, and
arrangement of each series are available through the Organization section of
the finding aid.
Return to the Table of Contents
Papers are organized in the following series:
Return to the Table of Contents
The following terms have been used to index the description of this
collection in the Newberry Library's public catalog. Researchers desiring
additional materials on a particular topic should search the catalog using
these headings.
Names
- Banks, Nancy
(Editor)
- Barry, Lynda,
1956-
- Chicago Reader
- Reader (Chicago,
Ill.)
Subjects
- Alternative mass media --
Illinois -- Chicago
- Chicago (Ill.) --
Newspapers
- Journalism -- Illinois --
Chicago -- History
- Layout
(composition)
- Letters to the
editor
- Manuscripts, American --
Illinois -- Chicago
- Mechanicals (camera-ready
copy)
- Newspaper layout and
typography
- Newspaper publishing --
Illinois -- Chicago
- Reporters and reporting
- Underground press
publications -- Illinois -- Chicago
Return to the Table of Contents
See also the Chicago Reader Photographs: Performance Collection
(Midwest MS Chicago Reader PP) , the Chicago Reader Artwork Collection (Midwest
MS Chicago Reader A), and the Chicago Reader Photographs: News Collection
(Midwest MS Chicago Reader PN).
Return to the Table of Contents
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| Original copy submitted by authors to the Chicago Reader. Copy was
weeded to keep published feature articles and letters to the editor, but a few
early and year-end issues, including columns, were kept as samples of complete
issues. Also includes unsolicited submissions, many with editorial comment,
which were rejected for publication.
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| Arranged Chronologically. |
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| Box |
Folder |
Contents |
| 1 |
1-12 |
Originial Copy, Aug.-Nov. 1972 |
| 2 |
13-30 |
Original Copy, Dec. 1972-Sep. 1974 |
| 3 |
31-54 |
Original Copy, Oct. 1974-Apr. 1975 |
| 4 |
55-69 |
Original Copy, May-Aug. 1975 |
| 5 |
70-82 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Oct. 1975 |
| 6 |
83-97 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1975-Feb. 1976 |
| 7 |
98-119 |
Original Copy, Mar.-Jul. 1976 |
| 8 |
120-137 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Nov. 1976 |
| 9 |
138-158 |
Original Copy, Dec. 1976-Apr. 1977 |
| 10 |
159-184 |
Original Copy, May.-Oct. 1977 |
| 11 |
185-204 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1977-Mar. 1978 |
| 12 |
205-230 |
Original Copy, Apr.Sep. 1978 |
| 13 |
231-254 |
Original Copy, Oct. 1978-Mar. 1979 |
| 14 |
255-279 |
Original Copy, Apr.-Sep. 1979 |
| 15 |
280-295 |
Original Copy, Oct. 1979-Jan. 1980 |
| 16 |
296-313 |
Original Copy, Feb.-May 1980 |
| 17 |
314-334 |
Original Copy, Jun.-Oct. 1980 |
| 18 |
335-349 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1980-Feb. 1981 |
| 19 |
350-362 |
Original Copy, Mar.-May 1981 |
| 20 |
363-375 |
Original Copy, Jun.-Aug. 1981 |
| 21 |
376-388 |
Original Copy, Sep.-Nov. 1981 |
| 22 |
389-406 |
Original Copy, Dec. 1981-Apr. 1982 |
| 23 |
407-423 |
Original Copy, May-Aug. 1982 |
| 24 |
424-439 |
Original Copy, Sep.-Dec. 1982 |
| 25 |
440-451 |
Original Copy, Jan.-Mar. 1983 |
| 26 |
452-469 |
Original Copy, Apr.-Jul. 1983 |
| 27 |
470-486 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Nov. 1983 |
| 28 |
487-498 |
Original Copy, Dec. 1983-Feb. 1984 |
| 29 |
499-516 |
Original Copy, Mar.-Jun. 1984 |
| 30 |
517-538 |
Original Copy, Jul.-Nov. 1984 |
| 31 |
539-553 |
Original Copy, Dec. 1984-Mar. 1985 |
| 32 |
554-572 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Dec. 1985 |
| 33 |
573-589 |
Original Copy, Jan.-May 1987 |
| 34 |
590-607 |
Original Copy, Jul.-Oct. 1987 |
| 35 |
608-623 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1987-Feb. 1988 |
| 36 |
624-640 |
Original Copy, Mar.-Jun. 1988 |
| 37 |
641-660 |
Original Copy, Jul., Sep.-Dec. 1988 |
| 38 |
661-677 |
Original Copy, Jan.-Apr. 1989 |
| 39 |
678-696 |
Original Copy, May-Sep. 1989 |
| 40 |
697-709 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Oct. 1991 |
| 41 |
710-722 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1991-Jan. 1992 |
| 42 |
723-734 |
Original Copy, Feb.-Apr. 1992 |
| 43 |
735-748 |
Original Copy, May-Jul. 1992 |
| 44 |
749-761 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Oct. 1992 |
| 45 |
762-773 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1992-Jan. 1993 |
| 46 |
774-786 |
Original Copy, Feb.-Apr. 1993 |
| 47 |
787-799 |
Original Copy, May-Jul. 1993 |
| 48 |
800-812 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Oct. 1993 |
| 49 |
813-824 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1993-Jan. 1994 |
| 50 |
825-837 |
Original Copy, Feb.-Apr. 1994 |
| 51 |
838-850 |
Original Copy, May-Jul. 1994 |
| 52 |
851-863 |
Original Copy, Aug.-Oct. 1994 |
| 53 |
864-879 |
Original Copy, Nov. 1994-Feb. 1995 |
| 54 |
880-897 |
Original Copy, Mar.-Jun. 1995 |
| 55 |
898-903 |
Rejected Submissions, 1975-1979 |
| 56 |
904-922 |
Rejected Submissions, 1980-1981 |
| 57 |
923-939 |
Rejected Submissions, 1982-1983 |
| 58 |
940-952 |
Rejected Submissions, 1983-1986, n.d. |
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| Manuscripts, reporters' notes, correspondence, research materials,
and legal documents pertaining to Chicago Reader feature articles which
involved possible or actual litigation.
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| Arranged alphabetically by author. |
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| Box |
Folder |
Contents |
| 59 |
953-957 |
Berry, Jason - The Does vs. The Chicago Archdiocese
(pedofile priest), 1988-1991
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| 59 |
958 |
Bogira, Steve - Kriston Kato, 1991 |
| 59 |
959 |
Cohen, Dan - CIN (Chicago Intervention Network),
1985
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| 60 |
960 |
Colander, Pat - Giangrande murder, ca. 1980s |
| 60 |
961 |
Colander, Pat - The Lady Vanishes: The Final Days of
Helen Brach, 1982
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| 60 |
962 |
Conroy, John - police torture, 1990 |
| 60 |
963 |
Conroy, John on Larry Eyler, 1992 |
| 60 |
964 |
Eisendrath, John - Buddy Bear food centers, 1984 |
| 61 |
965-966 |
Eisendrath, John - Buddy Bear food centers, 1984 |
| 61 |
967 |
Henderson, Harold - Leonard McGregor and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, 1988
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| 61 |
968 |
Hot Type on Robert Seltzner and Ed Vrdolak, 1988 |
| 61 |
969 |
Joravsky, Ben on Howard Medley, 1990 |
| 61 |
970 |
Lenehan, Michael on Richard Flynn, 1984 |
| 62 |
971-973 |
Lenehan, Michael on Richard Flynn, 1984 |
| 62 |
974 |
Marin, Pam - Flipside vs. Jam Productions, 1985 |
| 62 |
975 |
McClory, Robert on Junior Salazar, 1993 |
| 63 |
976-979 |
Miner, Michael on B&W vs. Walter Jacobson,
ca. 1980s
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| 63 |
980 |
Pick, Grant on Child Abduction, 1994 |
| 64 |
981 |
Pick, Grant on Marcus Akinlana, 1993 |
| 64 |
982 |
Sacks, Ed - payphones, 1985 |
| 64 |
983-985 |
Schmidt, George N. on James Moffat, 1985 |
| 65 |
986-991 |
Warden, Rob and James Touhy on Richard Rinella,
1993
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| 66 |
992 |
Warden, Rob and James Touhy on Richard Rinella,
1993
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| 66 |
993 |
Wyman, Bill on skinheads, 1989 |
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| A small amount of administrative materials including
correspondence from readers, questions submitted to the Straight Dope column,
and several letters from comic artists; research materials and correspondence
of editor Nancy Banks, much of which pertains to her freelance writing for
other publications; a few layout and paste-up spreads for ads, yearly
calendars, and special issues.
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| Arranged alphabetically. |
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| Box |
Folder |
Contents |
| 67 |
994 |
Correspondence - Barry, Lynda (includes original
artwork), 1981-2000
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| 67 |
995 |
Correspondence - Brown, William L., 1989-1992, n.d. |
| 67 |
996 |
Correspondence - Harlow, Jane, 1982 |
| 67 |
997 |
Correspondence - Mueller, Pete, 1994 |
| 67 |
998 |
Correspondence - Prapuolenis, Kaz, 1993-1996 |
| 67 |
999 |
Correspondence - Yellow Press (Darlene Pearlstein),
ca. 1970s
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| 67 |
1000 |
Correspondence - miscellaneous, 1975-2004 |
| 67 |
1001-1005 |
Correspondence - letters to the editor, 1937-1978 |
| 68 |
1006-1009 |
Correspondence - letters to the editor, 1978-1979 |
| 69 |
1010-1014 |
Correspondence - letters to the editor, 1980-1982 |
| 70 |
1015-1020 |
Correspondence - letters to the editor, 1983-1986 |
| 71 |
1021-1026 |
Correspondence - letters to the editor, 1986-1993 |
| 72 |
1027-1034 |
Correspondence - Straight Dope, 1975-1978, n.d. |
| 72 |
1035 |
Editorial and marketing awards, 1998, 2000 |
| 72 |
1036 |
Financial documents, space lease, 1972, 1986 |
| 73 |
1037-1040 |
Nancy Banks Files - alcoholism - research materials,
ca. 1970s
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| 73 |
1041 |
Nancy Banks Files - Aragon and Trianon ballrooms,
ca. 1970s
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| 74 |
1042 |
Nancy Banks Files - The Chicagoan, 1973 |
| 74 |
1043 |
Nancy Banks Files - Chicago Daily News, 1972, n.d. |
| 74 |
1044 |
Nancy Banks Files - Chicago Magazine, ca. 1970s |
| 74 |
1045 |
Nancy Banks Files - Chicago Tribune - correspondence,
ca. 1970s
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| 74 |
1046 |
Nancy Banks Files - Chicago Tribune Magazine,
ca. 1970s
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| 74 |
1047 |
Nancy Banks Files - Chicago Public Library, ca. 1970s |
| 74 |
1048 |
Nancy Banks Files - Democratic National Convention,
ca. 1970s
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| 74 |
1049 |
Nancy Banks Files - Hyde Parker, 1973-1974 |
| 74 |
1050 |
Nancy Banks Files - notes, 1971-1972 |
| 75 |
1051-1053 |
Nancy Banks Files - notes, 1973-1975 |
| 75 |
1054 |
Nancy Banks Files - notebooks, ca. 1970s |
| 75 |
1055 |
Nancy Banks Files - sex books, ca, 1970s |
| 76 |
1056 |
Press releases, press kits, 1970s |
| 76 |
1057 |
Readers Guide - advertising rates, proofs, 1996-1997, n.d. |
| 76 |
1058 |
Reporters' notes (authorship unknown), n.d. |
| 76 |
1059 |
Reporters' notebooks (authorship unknown), n.d. |
| 76 |
1060 |
Stationary, letterhead, ca. 1970s |
| 76 |
1061 |
25th Anniversary issue, 1996 |
| 76 |
1062 |
25th Anniversary - party and exhibit, 1996-1997 |
| 77 |
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25th Anniversary - souvenir gift bag, 1996 |
| 78 |
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Layouts and paste-ups ca. 1980s-1990s |
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