LYCOS RETRIEVER Beta Retriever Home  |  What is Lycos Retriever?   
Chicago Tribune
built 125 days ago
Chicago Tribune building The Chicago Tribune is a major daily newspaper based in Chicago, Illinois and owned by the Tribune Company. Formerly self-styled as the "World's Greatest Newspaper" (for which WGN radio and television is named), it remains the principal daily newspaper of the Chicago metropolitan region and the Midwestern United States and is currently the 5th largest newspaper in America by circulation.
The picture that appears on the front page of tomorrow’s Chicago Tribune may not be a photograph at all; it might be a frame-grab from an HD digital video camcorder. Either way, readers won’t be able to tell the difference, and there is no reason they should need to.
CHICAGO, Nov. 5 /PRNewswire/ -- Chicago Tribune today released circulation information for the 26 weeks ending September 30, 2007. As filed with the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the Chicago Tribune is reporting Sunday total average paid circulation of 917,868 and daily circulation (Monday - Friday) of 559,404. Circulation results included overall circulation growth on Wednesdays and Fridays and home delivery growth on Sundays. These results on key advertising days were driven by strong subscriber sales and reader retention.
Source:
Chicago, IL (LifeNews.com) -- The Chicago Tribune has published a news story that is the latest "hit piece" by the mainstream media attacking the work of pregnancy centers. The article contains information from a study conducted by a pro-abortion member of Congress claiming pregnancy centers give misleading information.
Source:
The lead editorial in the first issue the Chicago Tribune published after the Great Chicago Fire. Since 1925, the Chicago Tribune has been housed in the Tribune Tower on North Michigan Avenue on the Magnificent Mile. The building is neo-Gothic in style, and the design was the winner of an international competition hosted by the Tribune.
Entry Detail This design was the result of an international competition for "the most beautiful office building in the world," held in 1922 by the Chicago Tribune newspaper. The various competition entries proved extremely influential for the development of skyscraper architecture in the 1920s. The winning entry, with a crowning tower with flying buttresses, is derived from the design of the French cathedral of Rouen and gives the building its striking silhouette. The base of the building is studded with over 120 stones from famed sites and structures in all 50 states and dozens of foreign countries. They range from the Parthenon (Greece) and Taj Mahal (India) to Bunker Hill (Massachusetts) and Mark Twain's "Injun Joe Cave" (Missouri).
SEARCH
MORE ABOUT
  Chicago Tribune