- Leo Lerner
Leo A. Lerner (1907-1967) was an American
newspaper editor and founder ofLerner Newspapers , at one time the largest chain ofweekly newspaper s in the world.Newspaper career
Born in
Chicago , Lerner attendedNorthwestern University , graduating in 1928. While there he was the Night Editor and Drama Editor for the "Daily Northwestern". After graduation he worked for several local Chicago papers until the late 1940s, and was the only neighborhood newspaperman accredited by theState Department to cover theUnited Nations Conference at San Francisco in 1945. In the late 1940s he partnered with A. O. Caplan to become owner and manager of sixteen local papers, with a total circulation of 219,000. By 1958 Lerner was president, editor, and publisher of four newspaper conglomerates with more than 19 different papers.Public service
Lerner was very active in public service. He was a member of the Board of Directors of the
Chicago Public Library and ofAmericans for Democratic Action , founder ofIndependent Voters of Illinois , and President of the Citizens Schools Committee. He helped foundRoosevelt University , where he taughtjournalism and eventually became President of its Board of Trustees. He was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Scandinavian Seminar, which funded nine months of study in anyScandinavia n country for qualified students. He was a member of the Board of the ChicagoBetter Business Bureau and was appointed to the Illinois Parole and Pardon Board. In 1964 PresidentLyndon B. Johnson invited him to join the Citizens Advisory Board of the Community Relations Service.Awards
* Chicago Medal of Merit (1961)
* Editorial Award,Illinois Press Association (1937)
*National Herrick Award (1951)
* Publisher of the Year Award (1953)Bibliography
Lerner wrote four books: "Continental Journey" (1947), written during a tour of Europe, "The Itch of Opinion" (1956), "The Italics Are Mine" (1960), and "The Truth Ripens" (1967).
External links
* [http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/l/lerner_la.htm Leo A. Lerner papers] at Syracuse University Special Collections Research Center
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.