Showing posts with label Daley Plaza. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daley Plaza. Show all posts

April 25, 2014

Another Protest


Chicago Loop, December 1970. Here's one of the last images I have of the Simas Kudirka protest.

A march against Russian aggression will take place this Sunday, April 27, 2014, in Chicago.

February 4, 2014

Another Look


Chicago Loop, December, 1970. We still have a few more photos from the Simas Kudirka protest.

Here's a clip of Kudirka in Chicago, after the Soviets released him in 1974.

December 18, 2013

November 16, 2013

Let's look more closely at those hats.


Chicago Loop, December, 1970. Here's another snapshot from the Simas Kudirka Protest. Many of the protesters were Displaced Persons who settled in Chicago after the war.

November 4, 2013

The Protest Crowd


Chicago Loop, December, 1970. Here's another snapshot from the Simas Kudirka protest. Do you remember Dutch Mill Candies? Dutch Mill had a shop in Winston Plaza. When my Parents wanted to buy s special hostess gift, they drove to Lake Street and shopped at the Oak Park Fannie May.

October 27, 2013

December 29, 2011

Addendum: The Picasso

I was reading a post at Althouse today, and I realized I'd neglected to publish a photo of the most identifiable landmark of Daley Plaza when I wrote about the 1970 Simas Kudirka Protest.

So here it is, the "Chicago Picasso," with placards under foot:


Chicago Loop, 1970. This is a photo from the only time my Dad participated in a political protest.

November 25, 2011

Not the Usual 1970s Protesters

Late in November 1970, a Lithuanian crewmember aboard a Soviet fishing vessel sought exile with the U.S. Coast Guard. The Soviet ship had anchored near Martha's Vineyard. Rear Admiral William B. Ellis ordered the Americans to return Simas Kudirka to the Soviets.

An international tangle flared, and Chicago Lithuanians—joined by other immigrants from countries absorbed by the Soviet Union—marched on (what is now) Daley Plaza to protest the State Department's mishandling of the incident.

My Dad attended and photographed the rally:
  

Chicago Loop, December, 1970. An older crowd gathers to protest the return of Kudirka.

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Chicago Loop, December 1970. "Only Dogs are Born Free in Russia." Playing at the movies: The Sand Pebbles, starring Steve McQueen.

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Chicago Loop, December 1970. Papier-mâché Russian Bear head.

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Chicago Loop, December 1970. Ha ha.

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Alan Arkin later starred in a made-for-TV-movie about Kudirka.

UPDATE: Stylish protesters, no?