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Roland, the editor, recently told me, the senior
writer, that he wouldn’t mind having an occasional piece from the Illinois Times archives
as a way to mine some of the good stuff that was done way back when. I can
arrange that, I said. Let’s see . . . where to begin? Oh, how about,
just for starters, taking a look at the papers, say, 30 years ago this
summer? The June 17, 1977, edition had a cover story
headlined “Patron Saint for Sixth Street,” about the woman who
was renovating the Maldaner’s and Pasfield buildings with the help of
a young architect, Dick Morse. The article, by James Krohe Jr., associate
editor, described its subject as “a little shorter than average,
slightly built, with a cap of restless dark brown hair. She is Carolyn
Oxtoby, downtown property owner, historic preservationist, school
president, and the person upon whom a great many people are depending to
pull off the hoped for resurrection of downtown.”
There was so much in the paper back then, in the days
before we had a viable ad base or decent circulation or livable wages. Each
issue had eight or nine smart news stories (like an interview with
Congressman Paul Findley, an update on the construction of the new Dallman
III power plant, a summary of new state laws affecting women) plus
half-a-dozen features, several columns, and lots of photographs. There were
clever headlines — “Growing up Baha’i
(B’Who?)” and “Why nurses are feeling better”
— plus a good mix of the heavy and light. Staff writers had a
reader-pleasing fascination with small towns like Pittsfield, Rushville,
Arcola, and Athens. Complementing the detailed calendar, written by Mizzou
journalism graduate Susan Mogerman, was a feature called “Good
Bets,” highlighting events not to be missed, such as a photography
show in Normal on The American Farm, including work by Dorothea Lange. It wasn’t quite
“The New Yorker of the Prairie,” but it wanted to be. A July issue chronicled the rise of neighborhood
associations. “The people’s pressure groups” highlighted
Alice Kaige, the force behind the West Side Neighborhood Association and
its fight to keep the neighborhood from going commercial. Neighborhood
associations, the article said, “give a chance to be heard to people
who might otherwise be ignored, filling the gaps between the theory and the
practice of local government.” Another person featured was Bruce
Strom, president of the Westwood Forum, which successfully fought off an
attempt to reopen Iles Avenue by the new White Oaks Mall when the
“west belt,” now Veterans Parkway, opened to traffic.
“It’s very difficult for citizens to affect the policies that
affect their lives directly,” said the activist who would later
become an alderman and mayoral candidate. What else can I find of interest in these old papers?
Oh yes, here’s a small item, from the July 8, 1977, edition, in a box
on the “Forum” page. Titled “A letter to our
readers,” it begins, “The Illinois
Times is under new ownership. The
newspaper has been purchased by Fletcher F. Farrar of Mt. Vernon, Ill., and
myself, Fletcher F. Farrar, Jr., known as Bud. I will take the title
executive editor. I am 28, and for the past four years have been an
editorial writer and state news reporter for Lindsay-Schaub Newspapers,
headquartered in Decatur. “Our purchase of Illinois
Times reflects our confidence in the
newspaper’s strength after two years of existence and in its
potential for continued growth and influence.” I said that we would
continue to provide readers “with high quality news and commentary,
with the idea of helping to make Illinois a better place to live. We will
be working on expanding our circulation territory to make Illinois Times truly Downstate
Illinois’ weekly newspaper.” We didn’t have many
advertisers back then — The Dan Walker Law Offices, Town and Country
Bank (advertising 8 percent certificates of deposit), Barker-Lubin’s
Lumber City, Doings One of Virden, and The Hub Clothiers were among the
early supporters — so the new owner wanted to keep them happy.
“We appreciate the business of those who advertise in the paper and
urge them to continue supporting this unusual journalistic effort. We will
be spreading their messages farther as more people become regular readers
of Illinois Times.”
I remember vividly that first week. I had to bring in my own Royal typewriter and gray metal desk, which
we somehow wedged into a corner of our tiny office in an old house on
Eighth Street, a few doors south of the Lincoln Home. I waited in line like
the rest of the staff to use the phone, which occasionally would go flying
in the middle of a call when somebody tripped over the long cord. By the
next week the new executive editor managed to get out a column decrying the
work of the legislature, which had just adjourned late. “The recently
adjourned session of the Illinois General Assembly should be remembered as
the laetrile session. When the legislature voted to legalize the unproven
anti-cancer drug, that seemed appropriate and symbolic. Nobody can prove
that laetrile actually helps people, but the only way it hurts is to divert
attention from real solutions to the cancer problem.” A real solution
would have been to control pollution, but instead the legislature relaxed
sulfur dioxide standards. Another “pseudo-solution” was
reinstatement of the death penalty, which Gov. James Thompson had signed
into law. The columnist exhibited more anger than persuasion, but, then, he
was young. “Does anybody really think capital punishment is going to
solve anything? More than being mean, the worst thing about this slam-bang
get-tough approach is the cruelty it inflicts on the victims of crime. The
murder rate will keep climbing, deviate sexual assaults will still occur,
no fireman will be any safer.”
I never quite learned to loosen up like my new
colleagues at the early IT, who knew how to substitute humor for vitriol and often tempered
anger with satire. The master was Krohe, our longtime columnist, who began
a piece on “Lawmakers” with this: “It used to be said
that when the legislators came to Springfield the townspeople would hurry
to get the women and children off the streets and begin keeping a watchful
eye on their wallets. It is true, of course, that polite Springfield
society still won’t invite a legislator to any indoor get-together,
and most would rather see one of their children marry a Ubangi tax evader
than a Cook County Democrat, but on the whole the town’s made its
peace with the General Assembly.”
Contact Fletcher Farrar at ffarrar@illinoistimes.com
This article appears in Jul 19-25, 2007.
