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Warrenville Joins Cool City Program On Jan. 17, Mayor David Brummel signed the US Mayor’s Climate Protection Agreement thereby officially joining Warrenville to the Sierra Club’s Cool Cities Program, an initiative led by volunteers around the country, striving for collaboration among “community members, organizations, businesses, and local leaders to implement clean energy solutions that save money, create jobs, and help curb global warming.
Warrenville 7-8 Grade Lady Cagers Win League Title The 2011-12 Quad City seventh and eighth Grade Girls Basketball League concluded its tournament and season Jan. 8 at Glenbard North High School, and the Warrenville Penguins finished the season undefeated at 12-0.
Forest Preserve Seeks Sewer and Water Service From Warrenville Approximately 75 Warrenville residents attended the Warrenville Community Development and Planning Committee of the Whole meeting Jan. 9, 2012 at Warrenville City Hall.
Welcome Home! A caring community braved the cold to welcome Lance Corporal Weston J. Smith USMC (in DC shirt) back home to make sure the hero knew how much his service and sacrifice meant.
 

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  • Warrenville Tightens Its Belt – Van Program Modified, Arts Grants Reduced Written by George Safford

    The Warrenville City Council met Jan. 23 as the Finance and Personnel Committee of the Whole, and leading off a long agenda was a consulting report on city services and staffing. The study was conducted from late August through November, and the analysis, findings and recommendations were prepared in December. Voorhees and Associates performed the work.



    Written on Thursday, 02 February 2012 18:09
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WebVillage Chronicles
Home Editorial Ready For Your “Daily” Paper?
Wednesday, 29 July 2009 09:54

Ready For Your “Daily” Paper?

Written by Martha Sprude
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When the Village Chronicles launches its new website, www.Vil­lageChronicles.net, next Saturday (Aug. 1), it intends to effect a sweep­ing change to the classic paradigm associated with most suburban newspapers.

As most of you know, the newspaper business and the rest of the print media world are experiencing an apocalyptic meltdown. Giants of the industry, begin­ning right here at home with the Tribune and the Sun Times are on life support. And they do not have long to live.

It all began a few years ago when the internet bubble burst, and technological advances allowed the survival and emergence of the cream of the crop of the elec­tronic media world. Exacerbating the problem is the world-wide economic down­turn, a phenomenon so pervasive and poisonous that it has transcended one of the earliest of economic postulates which holds that, in bad economic times, liquor, movies, and advertising are the places to put your money.

Couple all of this with the cold hard fact that no one under 30 reads the newspa­per, and you have created the perfect storm for the demise of the printed periodical.

However, there is a glimmer, perhaps even a beacon of hope for those of us who “get it” and adapt to what has become the new reality. As the electronic media emerges the victor, those of us with alleged communication skills have a shiny new toy at our disposal, one that gets newer and shinier with each passing day.

The bells and whistles abound on the new Village Chronicles website. All of the normal general information will be there—weather, sports, etc—and as stories come into our office, they will appear on the website long before the ink dries on Friday’s printed paper.

What is more, the stories will be more comprehensive because space is no ob­ject, and in some instances stories will appear on the site that never make it to the paper because of time sensitivity or because there simply is not enough room.

Now for the good parts. All of that “new” information will be immediately avail­able to you the reader through the use of an RSS (Really Simple Syndication) fea­ture that allows you to “pluck” from the site anything that was not there the last time you looked. You do not have to read the whole site to see if you have missed something.

But there is more. All of you can participate at will in the creation of the site’s content. You can write stories for submission. You can put up your pictures. You can embed videos. Each of you can create your own blog on the site if you so choose. You can participate in ongoing forums. And you can comment on any­thing you see on the site.

The Village Chronicles website belongs to you. We will be monitoring the site, but only for content that is obscene or violates one of the rules of the site. We are confident that the website will discipline itself to a large degree.

In the near future, we will be allowing paid advertising on the site. We are all used to the format of ads that we see in the paper, but the website will give our advertis­ers much more flexibility. They can use videos to create a better concept of their business. They can allow (you the public) to interact with their ads, comment on them, enter contests, play games—you name it and we will accommodate it.

All this and more. So count the days... and when Aug. 1 rolls around, start play­ing with your new toy.

Last modified on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 07:01
Martha Sprude

Martha Sprude

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Letters to the Editor

  • The Real Objection to the Pipeline Written by Connie Schmidt

    Although there is concern for underground water reservoirs in Nebraska, this is not the only objection that environmentalists have to the Keystone XL Pipe line proposed to carry oil from Canada to Texas.



    Written on Thursday, 02 February 2012 18:00

  • Thank You All Written by The Lederman family

    To all that came to celebrate and remember Ron Lederman’s life. Thank you for all the kind words and memories.



    Written on Thursday, 19 January 2012 07:51

  • VC is Hypocritical Written by Scott Shaw

    I am responding to, and have a question for managing editor, George Safford. Why is it okay for Mr. Safford to insult the Chronicles readers, but it is not okay for us to have an opportunity to properly defend ourselves? Your editorial policy is a disgrace to free and open speech.



    Written on Thursday, 19 January 2012 07:50

  • A Letter to the Editor—And to All Who Knew Joe Voegtle Written by Jeff Carstens

    Joe Voegtle passed away this last week. The President wasn't notified. There won't be a plaque at an Ivy League university. The New York Times didn't carry a single word. But there is a little corner of the universe where, for a time, everything stopped – a little town that could pass for anywhere in the United States; the town where Joe plied his trade, raised a family, and touched the lives of those around him.



    Written on Thursday, 29 December 2011 20:56

  • How Do We Stop the Horn Blowing? Written by Rich and Ellen Kurowski

    Why not do something constructive with the excess railroad funds? How about hiring a lawyer, familiar with dealing with railroad problems, to get the trains to stop blowing their horns?



    Written on Thursday, 15 December 2011 10:22