1) Through their eyes
By: Erica Schlaikjer
See More Stories by this author.Filmmaker Salome Chasnoff discusses her film, "Turning a Corner".
Published:
July, 2006
5) A Closer Look
In a recent letter published in the Chicago Sun-Times, Terry Peterson, the Chicago Housing Authority’s chief executive officer, trumpets successes of the city’s program to connect public housing residents to social services. But several of his statements were incomplete or misleading, according to city documents.
Published:
October, 2002
7) Book on 'N-Word' Raises Ire at UIC
By: Ellyn Ong, Sarah Karp and Audra Martin
See More Stories by this author.Exploring the history and meanings of the word “nigger” helps strip it of its racist power, Harvard Law School professor Randall Kennedy said in a recent lecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Published:
April, 2002
11) October 14, 2003
Oct. 24, 2003
Published:
November, 2003
12) A Matter of Trust
By: Steve Sierra
See More Stories by this author.In the opening scene of "Homeland Security," the new play by Chicago writer Stuart Flack, Raj, an Indian American doctor in his 30s, and Susan, his Jewish girlfriend, are seated in a small room at the airport.
Published:
November, 2003
13) Bowled Over: In Rec Center, Auburn Gresham Residents See Community Resurgence
By: Janelle Frost
See More Stories by this author.To many residents, the new Hawthorne Park Family Entertainment Center is a sign that the quality of life is improving in a resurgent Auburn Gresham.
Published:
April, 2003
14) Theaters Missing Black Patrons
By: Jocelyn Prince
See More Stories by this author.The ticket prices, location and programming of Chicago theaters might be keeping blacks away, according to members of Chicago’s theater community.
Published:
April, 2003
15) Riches to Rags and Back Again
Chicago radio personality Herb Kent was elected mayor of Bronzeville by an informal ballot vote in the South Side neighborhood in August 1999.
Published:
April, 2003
16) New Theater Opening to Mixed Reviews
By: Jocelyn Prince
See More Stories by this author.The Second City, a Chicago-based improvisational comedy corporation, plans to open a theater in Bronzeville, a mostly black South Side neighborhood. But the plan has earned mixed reviews.
Published:
April, 2003
17) Campaign Targets âWhite Power Musicâ--and Provokes Store Owners
By: Ben Aaronson
See More Stories by this author.An anti-bigotry organization fights the relatively unknown, but steadily growing, white power music industry that espouses racism and anti-Semitism. Record store owners dispute some of the group's claims.
Published:
March, 2003
18) Who's Listening
WGN’s and WGCI’s audiences were radically different in 1999.
Published:
February, 2001
19) Revenue and Rating Trends
WGCI surpassed WGN in audience share in 1997. WGN is the consistent leader in revenues. Stations shown are the top five in average audience share.
Published:
February, 2001
20) Radios Serving Minorities Lag in Revenue Performance
By: Stephanie Williams and Ingrid Arnoux
See More Stories by this author.While the city's two most popular stations, WGCI and WGN, share the same playing field in their competition for audience share and billings, their ad revenues remain different.
Published:
February, 2001