Lori Olszewski

Lori Olszewski

Lori Olszewski

By Jim Killam

“I’m not one of those people who does the same thing or stays in the same place for 25 years,” Lori Olszewski says.

No kidding.

Check this resume: Grew up on the South Side, the daughter of a Chicago cop. Attended NIU (“It’s a great school for people without a lot of money,” she says.) During a study-abroad year in college, lived with a countess in Austria and went to school on the campus used as “The Sound of Music” set. Spent 11 years as a reporter in northwest Indiana, for the Hammond Times and the Gary Post-Tribune. Moved to the West Coast in 1988. As a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, did some of the earliest reporting on the AIDS epidemic. Reported on human rights abuses in Romania – “the worst thing I’ve ever seen in my life” – in stories the United Nations cited when leveling sanctions. Took six months off the newspaper to work on “School Colors,” a PBS Frontline documentary about race relations that won the DuPont award. Won a national award for education reporting, for her coverage of the Oakland school district. One of 12 journalists selected for Harvard University’s prestigious Nieman Fellowship in 1999-2000. Returned to Chicago in 2001 to become an education writer for the Chicago Tribune. A mile-long list of achievements and awards.

And it all started at the Northern Star, which she says is still influencing her journalistic life. “It’s the reason I’m a reporter. It’s where I learned how to be a reporter – to interview, to manage a beat. Most important, I learned the values. There’s no point in doing this unless you believe in the public service aspect of it. I think there’s more than enough entertainment in the world. We bring that watchdog function. And we create a sense of community. I believe that what we do can make the world a better place if we do it right.”

That, along with the variety, is why Lori’s never thought seriously of a career change.

“For me, it’s knowing myself and what keeps me jazzed. A lot of people get into habit trails, where they just keep doing the same thing. What keeps my passion going is, I try to challenge myself and get new experiences every couple of years. Each new thing opens your eyes.”