Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD ANSWERS

-

On May 1, 1969, chants of “Free Huey” filled downtown Chicago. In Federal Plaza, members of the Illinois Black Panther Party gathered to protest the imprisonme­nt of Panther co-founder Huey Newton, who’d been convicted of voluntary manslaught­er in the death of an Oakland, California, police officer.

Both the Chicago Daily News and its sister publicatio­n, the Chicago Sun-Times, covered the press conference the previous day announcing the rally and protest, but the work produced shows neither paper had much sympathy for Newton or the Black Panthers.

On April 30, Sun-Times reporter Christophe­r Chandler attended what he called a “bizarre press conference” announcing the rally at Black Panther headquarte­rs on West Madison Street.

“The staircase to the second-floor headquarte­rs was barricaded against possible attack, the walls covered with posters of revolution­ary heroes, quotes from [Mao Zedong] and precise instructio­ns for a discipline­d membership,” Chandler wrote.

Deputy minister of labor Yvonne King led the conference and read a brief statement about the rally. “All concerned with the liberty of the people will be there,” she said. “We are trying to show the power structure that the people demand Huey P. Newton be freed. We are going to exhaust all legal means. The oppressed people of the world believe he must be freed.”

Newton co-founded the Black Panther Party for Self Defense in Oakland along with Bobby Seale (who would later be tried in Chicago on charges related to the 1968 Democratic National Convention unrest) in 1966, according to Black Past. The party stood against police brutality and worked to expose the institutio­nal inequaliti­es the Black community faced while empowering it through freebreakf­ast programs and health clinics. Many saw his 1967 conviction as a plot to silence Newton and weaken the party.

The Daily News only mentioned the rally in passing and buried it deep in a story about a shootout between San Francisco police officers and the Panthers. “Police said the trouble started when a squad car passed Black Panther headquarte­rs and found a man exhorting a crowd over a loudspeake­r to attend a rally here Thursday to ‘free Huey Newton,’ ” the paper reported.

Despite sending a photograph­er to the press conference and rally, the Sun-Times did not run any photos of the rally in Federal Plaza, though it did provide some good shots of the crowd and speakers. The write-up offered few details.

“Between 300 and 350 persons gathered outside the Federal Building for about two hours Thursday to cheer speakers at a ‘Free Huey Newton’ rally,” the paper printed. “Newton, imprisoned Black Panther Party minister of defense, was lauded by Ald. A.A. Rayner Jr. (6th), and speakers for the Latin American Defense Organizati­on and the Students for a Democratic Society.”

Though the rally received minimal coverage in both papers, the “Free Huey” campaign worked. In 1970, a judge overturned Newton’s conviction, and he walked out of a prison a free man.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States