As of 2021,[update] the faculty adviser to the newspaper is Katie Drews,[1] a former investigative reporter at the Better Government Association and the 2008-09 editor-in-chief of The Phoenix.
History
Loyola's student newspaper was founded as the Loyola News in 1924.[3] In 1969, the university sought to take editorial control of Loyola News after the paper criticized the university's administration and the Vietnam War.[2] The writers and staff members responded by shutting down Loyola News, and founding TheLoyola Phoenix, which initially operated as an independent business.[2]
Following the newspaper's coverage of an alleged violent beating of a gay man on the CTA Red Line by a then-Loyola student in January 2010, the Phoenix was subpoenaed for their notes regarding the case. Attorneys for the criminal defendant also subpoenaed the Chicago Sun-Times and the Chicago Tribune. In the summer of 2011, however, judge Diane Cannon, blocked the subpoena, which set a new standard for student journalists, entitling them to the same protection as their professional counterparts. The ruling was the first decision in Illinois to apply the law to a student newspaper.[4]